Sullivan Barrera Training Camp Notes: Ready for Anything

Sullivan Barrera
Big Bear Lake, CA: As IBF number one light heavyweight contender Sullivan Barrera (17-0, 12 KOs) prepares for the biggest fight of his career against one of the sport’s top pound-for-pound fighters, Andre Ward (28-0, 15 KOs), at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California which will be televised live on HBO, the 34-year old from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba is calm, confident and ready for anything.

Barrera trains in Big Bear Lake, California with legendary trainer Abel Sanchez. Sanchez is best known for working with IBF, WBA and WBC Interim Middleweight World Champion Gennady “GGG” Golovkin. Sullivan has taken advantage of working with his prestigious coach and being surrounded by other elite boxers like Golovkin. He said, “Camp has been great. I feel great. I am ready to make history on March 26. The best advice I have received was from Gennady Golovkin who told me to work my speed and to fight intelligently. Abel Sanchez told me not lose my cool and to stay focused at all times.”

Sanchez and Barrera
Photo Credits: Craig Bennett/Main Events

This advice has given Barrera the confidence he needs to face Ward, the former WBA & WBC Super Middleweight World Champion, as he makes the transition into the light heavyweight division. According to Sullivan, “[Ward] is considered one of the top three or four fighters in the world. I admire him a lot. He is a great challenge. I love what he has done. I also consider myself one of the best talents in the world. This opportunity is something that will prove to the world that I am at the top. I think I am getting him at the right moment because he is moving up. This is the perfect fight for me to prepare for the future 175 pound fighters who are at the elite level.”

Sanchez believes Sullivan is ready for this challenge because he has been able to adapt Sullivan’s Cuban skills with Abel’s approach to create an entirely unique style. Explained Sanchez, “Sullivan has a style that is partly from the Cuban school and partly from my school. The attacking style that he has now is because of some of the things that we practice in the gym. It’s just a matter of going at Andre and taking what he gives us. I wasn’t trying to change his Cuban style, what I was trying to do is make him a little more aggressive. I wanted to make him stick out his punches a little more and have better balance. I wanted a little better positioning and technique with his legs. By adding the two styles together it gives us more opportunity for him to do what he has to do.”

Barrera
Photo Credits: Mike Gladysz/Main Events

This unique style has given Sullivan the confidence he needs as he prepares to face Ward. He said, “If I have to box, I will box. If I have to attack him, I will attack him but I will be ready for anything as the fight goes on. I, like everyone else, recognize that Andre is a great boxer. I, too, am a great boxer. The only thing that is missing in my resume is that I haven’t had the opportunity. I think this is the opportunity for me to prove that I am just as good.”

Ward vs. Barrera, a 12-round IBF number one position and mandatory position eliminator which is presented by Roc Nation Sports in association with Main Events, takes place Saturday, March 26, 2016 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California. The event is sponsored by Corona Extra, Ticketmaster, Corporate Travel Management Solutions (ctms), Glad, Lyft, Zappos, BodyArmor, SAN Nutrition, Shoe Palace, The Waterfront Hotel and Visit Oakland. The event will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing beginning at 9:45 p.m. ET/PT. Opening the HBO telecast will be Joseph Diaz Jr. vs. Jayson Velez in a 10-round fight for the NABF Featherweight title presented by Golden Boy Promotions in association with Miguel Cotto Promotions.

Tickets priced at $300, $150, $100, $50 and $25, not including applicable service charges and taxes are available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com (bit.ly/WardBarreraTix) and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000.

For more information, please visit www.rocnation.com, www.mainevents.com, www.goldenboypromotions.com, www.promocionesmiguelcotto.com, www.hbo.com/boxing, follow us on Twitter and Instagram @rocnation, @main_events, @goldenboyboxing, @cottopromotions and @HBOBoxing and become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RocNation, www.facebook.com/MainEventsBoxing, www.facebook.com/GoldenBoyBoxing and www.facebook.com/HBOBoxing.

Follow the conversation on Twitter by using #WardBarrera.




TWO-TIME WORLD CHAMPION ANDRE WARD AND UNDEFEATED SULLIVAN BARRERA HOST FINAL INTERNATIONAL MEDIA CONFERENCE CALL TRANSCRIPT

Andre Ward Post Fight
Two-Time World Champion and top-rated pound-for-pound fighter Andre Ward (28-0, 15 KOs) and undefeated, number one rated IBF light heavyweight contender Sullivan Barrera (17-0, 12 KOs) hosted their final international media conference. Ward vs. Barrera, a 12-round IBF number one position and mandatory position eliminator which is presented by Roc Nation Sports in association with Main Events, takes place Saturday, March 26, 2016 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California. The event is sponsored by Corona Extra, Ticketmaster, Corporate Travel Management Solutions (ctms), Glad, Lyft, Zappos, BodyArmor, SAN Nutrition, Shoe Palace, The Waterfront Hotel and Visit Oakland. The event will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing beginning at 9:45 p.m. ET/PT. Opening the HBO telecast will be Joseph Diaz Jr. vs. Jayson Velez in a 10-round fight for the NABF Featherweight title presented by Golden Boy Promotions in association with Miguel Cotto Promotions.

Tickets priced at $300, $150, $100, $50 and $25, not including applicable service charges and taxes are available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com (bit.ly/WardBarreraTix) and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000.

Follow the conversation on Twitter by using #WardBarrera.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Andre Ward versus Sullivan Barrera Final International Media Conference Call. Your host for today, Dave Itskowitch, will now begin.

David Itskowitch: Thank you very much and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We’re less than two weeks away from Andre Ward versus Sullivan Barrera on Saturday, March 26 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California which will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing beginning at 9:45 p.m. ET/PT.

The 12-round IBF Number 1 position and mandatory position eliminator is presented by Roc Nation Sports in association with Main Events. Opening the HBO telecast will be Joseph Diaz, Jr versus Jason Velez in a 10-round fight for the NABF feather weight title which is presented by Golden Boy Promotions in association with Miguel Cotto Promotions.

Our event is sponsored by Corona Extra, Ticketmaster, Corporate Travel Management Solutions (ctms), Glad, Lyft, Zappos, BodyArmor, SAN Nutrition, Shoe Palace, the Waterfront Hotel and Visit Oakland. Tickets priced from $25 to $300 are available at Ticketmaster. They’re going fast. We urge everyone to get out there and get your tickets as soon as possible.

Before we begin I’d like to acknowledge and thank several people who were instrumental in getting this fight made: Andre’s manager James Prince and attorney Josh Dubin, Main Event CEO Kathy Duva, Executive Vice President of HBO Sports Peter Nelson, as well as Ryan Northcott and the entire team at Oracle Arena.

Two of the light heavyweights on the planet will collide on March 26. They have a combined record of 45-0 with 27 knockouts. Neither has tasted defeat as a professional. While each man has a formidable opponent in front of him they both have their eyes on Unified Light Heavyweight World Champion Sergey Kovalev and his three belts and only one will move on to meet him.

Before we get to Andre for his opening statements and questions I just want to say that unfortunately, Virgil Hunter is not going to be joining us on the call. He had a last minute conflict arise. But if he were on the call I’m sure he would tell everyone that camp is going great and Andre is right on schedule. And will be ready to execute the game plan on March 26.

The next gentleman I’m going to introduce really doesn’t need much of an introduction. He was a 2004 Olympic gold medalist, the last U.S. boxer to bring home a gold. He destroyed the super-middleweight division with wins over Carl Froch, Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham and Saio Bika. He dominated and knocked out former light heavyweight world champion, Chad Dawson in the 2012 showdown and his last fight he dominated former two-time world challenger, Paul Smith on June 20 at Oracle Arena.

On March 26 he makes his move up to light heavyweight with designs on doing what he did at super middleweight, cleaning out and dominating everyone that stands in his way. It’s my pleasure to introduce one of the best pound-for-pound fighters on planet; the future of the light heavyweight division with a record of 28-0 and 15 KOs, a man who has an unblemished record dating back to the age of 12 from Oakland, California, Andre Ward.

Andre Ward: Hey, David. Excited to be on the call as usual. Excited that the fight is a little under two weeks away. We got a really great camp. And, you know, excited to answer any questions. And I want to also thank everybody that’s associated with the event, my team, obviously HBO and everybody on the other side, Barrera side as well.

David Itskowitch: All right thank you, Andre. I guess we can turn the call over to questions now for Andre.

Operator: Our first question comes from Eddie Goldman with No Holds Barred. Please go ahead. Eddie, your line is open.

Eddie Goldman: In the time since the other conference call a couple of weeks ago, what have you learned about your opponent, Sullivan Barrera? And what can you tell us other than obviously you record and your experience, you see as your advantages over him?

Andre Ward: Well it’s tough to get into what I, you know, what I want to exploit and capitalize on. But he’s a solid fighter; he’s a good fighter. He seems to be technically sound. He seems to have a good pedigree. And he’s got a good team. So, yeah, we’ve taken him very seriously like we do every opponent. And, you know, he’s a formidable opponent for sure.

Eddie Goldman: What do you see the level of – the role of experience plays? Because he’s fought some former champions who were at the end of their career, and he got the knockout over Murat. But he’s never fought like a fighter on your level. How much does that really play into it?

Andre Ward: I mean, time will tell. You know I feel he’s going to see the difference in the fight. No question about that. You know, you can watch film, your team can tell you what they want to tell you. You can talk. You know, but at the end of the day when you get in there that’s a different story, man, and I’ve said that my whole career. And I think that’s one of my biggest strengths is for whatever reason what happens in that ring, you know, guys don’t see it on film. And, you know, when they get in there and figure out everything that’s going on, the fight’s over.

At the same time, you know, you can’t put too many eggs in that basket because at one point in time I was a young fighter back in 2009 and that same type of thing was said about me and I knew in my heart that I’m going to do this and nobody else believed it. So, you know, it’s tough. We know what we know, we see what we see and we look at records, we look at performance and we say okay, we take a mental note. You can’t put too much into that because, you know, guys tend to rise to the occasion sometimes so you got to be ready for that too.

Eddie Goldman: He’s had a string of knockouts and TKOs in shorter fights. Do you see this, you know, being a long fight or plan for that?

Andre Ward: Yeah, I mean, I always train for 12 rounds, a strong 12 rounds. And I think that’s something else he’s going to realize when he gets to the fight is the pace is not the normal pace he’s used to. And I believe he’s going to get tired. And I don’t mean he’s going to stop fighting but I mean, he’s going to feel it, there’s no question about it.

Eddie Goldman: Okay. Do you want to make a prediction?

Andre Ward: I think predictions are overrated. That’s never been my style, that’s never been how I approach a fight. The one thing I do is I always guarantee that I’m ready. And, you know, I’ve never come in a fight overweight. I’ve never come in a fight not prepared. And you can’t predict what happens in a boxing ring. I know that I’m prepared for war. You have to be ready for anything and that’s what I’m prepared for. I’m prepared for a tough-tough fight. But I expect to get my hand raised at the end of the night.

Operator: Our next question comes from Martin Gallegos. Please go ahead.

Martin Gallegos: HBO is back in Oakland for the first time since your Dawson fight in 2012. And, you know, since that time we’ve seen fighters like Terrence Crawford do big numbers in his hometown. Are you going to be looking to continue fighting in Oakland and perhaps replicating that type of success in Oakland like we’ve seen Crawford in Nebraska and stuff like that?

Andre Ward: Yeah, no, first of all it’s always an honor and a privilege to have the HBO team here in the Bay. You know, when you see that HBO truck you know it’s time to go to work, you know, the whole team is here, the whole production is in town and, you know, it’s a big deal so that’s first and foremost.

But, you know, I’ve heard people talk about all he does is fight in Oakland. But, you know, I’m coming up on almost 30 fights as a pro and I think this may be my 8th time fighting in Oakland. So it’s a huge disparity versus the amount of times I have fought here versus when I haven’t.

But we take it a fight at a time. We don’t just predict that the next five fights are going to be here. We look at the fight, we look at the opponent and we look at everything and the team makes the decision. So, you know, anytime I’m afforded that opportunity knowing what I’ve come from and knowing these type of moments do for the city and the Bay area as a whole, I’m going to jump all over it and I’m always excited about it. I train and prepare for every fight but there’s something special about fighting at home.

Martin Gallegos: Okay. And I think just getting to the fight a little bit, obviously, you know, you have a tough match up with Barrera coming up. With this being your first fight at 175 do you see any, you know, a lot of people are wanting to see you fight, you know, obviously Sergey Kokalev later in the year, do you see from the time that you’ve seen Kokalev fight in the past, any similarities between the two?

Andre Ward: Not really. Not really. I don’t think they’re similar at all between Barrera and Kokalev?

Martin Gallegos: Yeah.

Andre Ward: No. I don’t really see any similarities.

Martin Gallegos: Okay.

Andre Ward: Different body types, different styles, just different all together.

Operator: Our next question comes from Gayle Falkenthal with Community Digital News.

Gayle Falkenthal: Thank you very much. Andre, following up that last question, what differences do you feel at this new weight division? How would you describe those?

Andre Ward: Oh I get to eat more. That’s #1. I mean, you definitely feel stronger when you don’t have to strip extra pounds off, you definitely feel stronger. I mean, that’s just, you know, it’s kind of a no brainer. But I still feel like I have my speed. I still feel like I have all the things that made me who I was at super middleweight but I also feel a lot stronger at 175. You know, to be honest I’m a lot happier because I didn’t have to kill myself, per se, to make weight. So just definitely happier. I feel very strong and I feel like I still maintained all the things that made me who I was at 168.

Gayle Falkenthal: And changing gears a little bit, there’s been a lot of discussion about professional boxers competing in the Olympic games. You are the last American man to win a gold medal for the U.S. so I’d love to know what you think about that and whether or not you’d be tempted to go for two.

Andre Ward: Yeah, I read that and it’s pretty interesting. It’s pretty interesting. I think right now its just about maybe getting more information about how something like that will work. But it definitely has sparked my interest and has gotten my attention.

Gayle Falkenthal: And would you rule it out? Would you consider it?

Andre Ward: You can’t rule anything out. You know, you’ve to get all the facts on the table. You’ve got to get all the details. I don’t have all of that right now. And obviously I’m preparing for a fight but I would just want to see everything and then just kind of digest it and then make a decision from there. But definitely interesting, very interesting.

Gayle Falkenthal: I agree. Thank you very much, Andre. Good luck.

Andre Ward: Thank you.

David Itskowitch: Andre, I have a question for you. And I think it was sort of touched on a little bit. But, how has this camp gone differently from the other camps that you’ve had based on now being higher in weight?

Andre Ward: For the most part everything is the same. Same mentality, same work ethic. I think, from a preparation standpoint you add certain things in that you otherwise couldn’t add it, you know, at a lower weight. It’s not really about adding anymore armor or anything, more muscle, but you’re just able to implement other training strategies to prepare for the heavier weight. More explosion work, a little bit more strength work and I definitely think that the fans will see the results of all of this a few weeks from now come March 26.

Operator: Our next question comes Mitch Abramson with Ring TV.com. Please go ahead.

Mitch Abramson: Just wondering, what was your reaction when you heard the news about the Olympics, you know, potentially allowing pros to compete? I’m just curious about what your gut reaction was to that.

Andre Ward: I was surprised and intrigued at the same time. You know I was like, wow. Like I had to read it a couple of times over to make sure I was reading what I thought I was reading.

So my publicist, she’s heavy into USA Boxing. She’s been a focal point in USA Boxing for a long time. So I picked up the phone and I was like man, did you see this? She was like yes, it’s legitimate. You know we’re trying to get more information.

So I think that’s where I am with it. You’ve got a lot of thoughts like wow that would be amazing for your country. Just wanting to know more about the process and what that would actually look like. But I’m very interested and I think it’s a very interesting proposition.

Mitch Abramson: Do you think that a lot of other professional fighters will take the plunge and actually compete in the Olympics?

Andre Ward: It’s tricky, you know. I think it just depends on the individual because there’s an argument for doing it and there’s an argument for not doing it.

I mean you – you know I’ve heard a quote – I read a quote rather that, Manny Pacquiao said that he, you know, paraphrasing a little bit, where basically that he’s excited about it. Not to say that he’s going to do it, but he’s willing to do anything for his country.

So you have guys like maybe a Manny who’s just very gung ho and he’s ready to go. And you’ve got other guys who, maybe like a Floyd Mayweather where, does it really, even though he felt like he got robbed in ’96 for an opportunity to want to go, does it really make sense to him to do something like that at this stage in his career and with all that he’s accomplished?

It’s a three minute round fight. And do pros and in his case, a legend like that, want to take a risk of something happening where he takes a L, or it just doesn’t look good or anything can happen. Is that something you want to take a risk doing at this stage in your career?

I really think it depends on the individual. It’s going to be really interesting to see if this is legitimate, what decision I make. Because I’ve got a lot of reasons to do it and a lot of reasons not to do it. So, I don’t know, it’s tough to say.

David Itskowitch: While we’re waiting for the next question to queue up. Andre I have an off-subject question to ask you but, it’s appropriate given the time of year that it is. And I know you live in an area that has two very popular college basketball teams. So fortunately I’m not going to ask you to pick one or the other because one is in the tournament.

Do you have any thoughts on the NCAA Tournament and who’s going to win?

Andre Ward: Oh, my goodness, I’m the wrong guy to ask. I get people asking me all the time to build brackets and I cheat. You know I cheat. When it gets to the last eight and the final four, that’s when I tune in and I start watching.

But the excitement around the NCAA is just amazing. And I mean it’s worldwide. So yes, I think it’s a good. And to see these athletes compete at this level at that age with that kind of pressure on them is amazing to watch.

Operator: Our next question comes from Keith Idec with The Record. Please go ahead.

Keith Idec: I was just wondering if you’ve given more thought to, if everything goes well on March 26, would you like to get another fight in before you fight Kovalev, or is that something you haven’t decided yet?

Andre Ward: Yes, I think that I’ve left that in the hands of my manager and my promoters. I think that’s the plan.

I’ve been entrenched in this fight and haven’t even talked anything past this fight. The reality is, without this fight and without a victory in this fight, there is no fight too. There is no Kovalev.

So, you know with situations like this, I really got to kind of put my blinders on and any other distractions and really just focus on this. Because that is the reality of the situation.

Keith Idec: So do you feel like kind of – it depends on how you feel after this fight and then you’ll decide from there basically?

Andre Ward: Well again, I’m the type of person that I literally put my blinders on and I don’t deal with it, you know.

And after the fight it’s something that I can sit down with the team about. And I believe they’ll get something worked out that everybody is happy with.

Operator: Our next question comes from Richard Bioceros with Boxing News.

Richard Bioceros: Hey, I just got one question for you. How did it change you to be in a big movie like Creed with Sylvester Stallone? And do you see yourself wanting to be in more big movies like that again?

Andre Ward: Absolutely. I communicated that to my team and I hope I get some other opportunities because even more so than just the exposure and the opportunity, the process was really, really, fun. The process was really fun. And it’s work.

I mean I couldn’t believe that I – the scenes that everybody saw in the movie, I think that was either three or four 12-hour days that I shot in Philadelphia. I mean 12-hour days straight and you get small breaks when they’re trying to set up new scenes or go over certain things.

But you’re not really breaking for an extended period of time. And I’m going back to my hotel room icing my shoulder, taking Epsom Salt – I was like man, this is crazy. Like this is a movie but its work. You know you literally have to work.

So I left the set being appreciative and thankful but then really feeling like man, I enjoyed that. And I would love to do more of it.

Richard Bioceros: Hey Andre, Stallone he’s a big huge boxing fan. How is he outside of not working. Does he talk about a lot of boxing?

Andre Ward: He’s a regular dude from what I can tell. He’s a regular guy. We knew each other for years. You know I’m not a guy that’s going to be like hey, Sylvester Stallone. Like I just fall back you know, and just kind of play my role. And if he speaks I’ll speak or maybe I’ll wave. And he came up and was like “Hey Andre, how you doing?”

We just talked. We sat there and talked. And on the Red Carpet we talked for a long period of time. I talked to his brother. He’s an amazing man. And as storied as his career and his life has been, he seems to be just a regular person, which is really cool to see.

David Itskowitch: All right Andre, you want to give any closing thoughts before you sign off?

Andre Ward: It’s March 26, it’s around the corner. Everything that I’ve done as a super middleweight; that book is closed. And the same hunger that I had in 2009 when I was unaccomplished and I had my opportunity against Mikkel Kessler, that’s the same drive that I have right now, years later. It’s the same mindset that I have.

So I’m just thankful for the opportunity. I’m excited to showcase March 26. Don’t miss it.

David Itskowitch: All right I think we’re now ready to continue. I’d like to introduce now to say a few words and introduce Sullivan Barrera, the CEO of Main Events, Kathy Duva.

Kathy Duva: Hello. Thank you Dave. Welcome everyone. It is going to be my distinct pleasure to introduce to you a fantastic young fighter who has been in the background working hard, earning his shot. And he is one of the most exciting fighters I think, in his weight division certainly.

And somebody who’s coming in to win and is going to go in there and make a statement on next Saturday. So it is my pleasure to introduce Sullivan Barrera.

Sullivan Barrera: Hello everyone, good afternoon. Camp has been great. I feel great. I’m ready to make history on March 26.

Kathy Duva: Also, Luis Molina is on the phone and Abel Sanchez. Luis and Abel, would you like to say something? Luis, do you want to go first?

Luis Molina: Yes Kathy, thank you. I appreciate the opportunity that was presented to Sullivan to fight Andre Ward on the March 26. I’d like to thank HBO, everyone involved and looking for a great turnout on March 26.

Kathy Duva: And Abel, do you have anything to say? Is Abel there? I guess not. So, we’ll open it up to questions for anybody.

Abel Sanchez: Well we’re happy to be involved in this promotion that we feel is a big opportunity for Sullivan. We feel that it’s at the right moment for Sullivan being that he is 34-years-old. We’re fighting a great fighter in Andre Ward. I know a lot about him because of my other client.

Andre is undoubtedly one of the top three fighters in the world. So we’re looking forward to a very, very hard fight and hopefully it pleases the fans.

Operator: Our first question comes from Dan Rafael with ESPN. Please go ahead.

Dan Rafael: Thank you very much. Everybody, hello. My question is for Sullivan. If you could ask Sullivan you were very vocal on social media, calling Andre Ward out for this fight which is unusual. There’s not a lot of boxers who actively seek out fights with Andre Ward.

I’d like to know from you, what was the reason that you targeted Andre Ward and that you wanted this fight specifically so much? No title on the line. Obviously you’re the underdog. What was it about this matchup that had you calling him out so vocally, for a while?

Sullivan Barrera: One of the main reasons that I targeted him was because he is considered one of the top three or four fighters in the world. I admire him a lot. He’s a great talent. I love what he’s done. But I also consider myself a great talent and I also consider myself one of the best fighters in the world. And this opportunity is something that will prove to the world that I am at the top.

Dan Rafael: Abel, when you heard his desire for this fight as his trainer what were your thoughts about what he was doing and when this fight was made? I mean, I’m sure you have confidence in him. I know you see him regularly in the gym. But, you know, it’s a big step up for him in terms of the guys he’s faced previously. So when you saw that your guy was really, really dogging Ward on social media, calling this fight what were you thinking?

Abel Sanchez: Well as a coach you’re excited because your guy really wants to go at the best. That’s something that’s consistently a topic in the gym. And to have him put it out like that on social media. I want to have a guy that wants to go to fight – wants to go get his and become the star that everybody else is around you.

Dan Rafael: Could you ask Sullivan about the fact that Andre has not been the most active fighter in the world. He’s moving up in weight. Does he feel like it’s sort of the sweet spot of where he can get him? I know he had that Paul Smith fight but that was a while ago already and it didn’t really do a whole lot for him. But that what it means to him that he’s getting him in this right spot I think possibly, moving up in weight and the level of inactivity, they’re sort of right there to maybe catch him off guard a little bit possibly.

Sullivan Barrera: Yes I think that I’m getting him at the right moment not only because he’s moving up. He didn’t say anything about the inactivity by the way Dan, but he is moving up and I am ranked – rated number one in the IBF. So it’s a perfect time for me to prepare for the future.

Dan Rafael: All right. I just have one more question for Sullivan. Andre has been a consummate boxer. Maybe not the most power but he’s had some knockouts here and there. I wondered if when he looks at the – and you can answer this too Abel — when you make your plan for how you’re going to approach this fight do you think Sullivan needs to stalk him and bring it to him offensively or because of his background as also a quality amateur fighter, comes from a Cuban system, knows how to box also, or is he going to be the guy that’s going to try to box in Andre Ward and maybe, you know, how point him? It seems like a tough call either way.

Sullivan Barrera: So obviously right now I’m not going to divulge my strategy but I have – we have a plan and if I have to box, I’ll box. If I have to attack him, I will attack him. But I will be ready for anything that – as the fight goes on.

Abel Sanchez: As far as for me Dan, Andre Ward is a great fighter. Andre Ward has been inactive but he still has a history of some great, great fights in the past. For me as a coach I’ve always believed that I have to prepare my guys to the best of my guy’s ability and go in doing the things that we do best. We’re not going to adapt to Andre Ward. We’re going to do what we do best and if that’s not good enough then we’ll have to go back to the drawing board and start again. But if I start to adapt to Andre Ward then my guy’s not doing what he does best.

Operator: Our next question comes from Eddie Goldman with No Holds Barred.

Eddie Goldman: Thank you very much. Hello everybody. A question for Sullivan: obviously Andre Ward is very well known, Olympic gold medalist, undefeated, Super Six Champion and so forth. You’re coming into this fight also undefeated but not as well known a fighter to the TV audiences. Could you explain why you think you’re going to be able to win this fight and be the first person to defeat Andre Ward since he was basically a kid?

Sullivan Barrera: I like everybody else, recognize that Andre is a great boxer. But I too am a great boxer I believe. The only thing that’s missing in my resume is that I haven’t had the opportunity. I think this is the opportunity for me to prove that I am just as good.

Eddie Goldman: And a question for Abel Sanchez. Abel, Andre has described his own style in the past as being a chameleon. In other words, he could be a boxer, he can get into a slug fest, he could be a boxer puncher and he’s proven that in the ring. How do you – since Sullivan’s gotten a lot of knockouts and TKOs recently how do you prepare and what kind of Andre Ward do you think is going to show up for this fight?

Abel Sanchez: Well the Andre Ward that we’ve watched in the past we haven’t seen lately. But it’s the best that I can do is prepare Sullivan to take what’s given to him, to take what’s in front of him. Sullivan has a style that is from the – I meant to say from part of the Cuban school and part of my school. The attacking style that he has now and the knockouts that he has now are some of the stuff that we practice in the gym. It’s just a matter of going at Andre and taking what he gives us but not to let Andre breathe.

It’ll make for a great fight because Andre I think has to prove – in my opinion anyway has to prove that he belongs at 175. He’s starting a full-fledged 175-pounder that’s very athletic, that has a long history of a Cuban background and has had a great history with me. So if Andre can handle that more power to him if he’ll come out. We don’t think he can. We think that we’ll be too good for him at this moment in Andre’s career. So that remains to be seen I guess on March 26.

Eddie Goldman: And if this fight goes long Sullivan’s never fought 12 rounds before. How is he prepared physically and mentally for those 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th rounds if it goes that long?

Abel Sanchez: You know, all coaches that have that level fighters, we always train for 14, 15 rounds. We never train for 12. It’s just a matter of making sure that we convince him and we take care of him in the corner so that he can continue to perform at the level that he does at the beginning of the fight. You’re right, he has never been that distance but there’s always a first time. We’ll see how he reacts. It’s up to us to keep him calm.

Operator: Our next question comes from Gayle Falkenthal with Communities Digital News.

Gayle Falkenthal: Hi Abel. You just mentioned merging your style with the Cuban style of boxing in working with Sullivan. I’d like to know a little more about how you go about doing that. How do you merge a style of boxer that is a little different than your approach and get the best of both working for you?

Abel Sanchez: First you have to have a willing fighter. There’s a lot of Cuban fighters that just will not change. On my own with Sullivan, Sullivan was willing to do anything that I asked him to do. So if I’m having that luck in the gym that just shows him that we can change, that we can combine styles and make them better.

I wasn’t trying to change his Cuban style. What I was trying to do is just make him a little more aggressive, make him sit down on his punches a little bit more, have better balance, a little better positioning and technique with his legs. But we haven’t really changed it. We’ve added to it and by adding the two styles together I think that it just gives more opportunities to do what he has to do.

Gayle Falkenthal: Now I’m not going to ask you to name names but have you ever had a Cuban fighter come to you and want to work with you that you had to turn down for the reasons you just described?

Abel Sanchez: Actually no. I had Mikey Perez for a little while and he went off somewhere else. But I’ve never had anybody decline because whether it’s Cuban, Mexican or whatever if you’re not willing to work to what I do in the gym there’s no sense in me having them. So right off the bat we would’ve separated. There was no way that I would’ve worked with somebody that didn’t want to cooperate.

Gayle Falkenthal: So the question is have you ever had to turn someone down for that reason?

Abel Sanchez: No.

Gayle Falkenthal: No – don’t need any names.

Abel Sanchez: No Cubans, no. I’ve turned other fighters down but no Cubans.

David Itskowitch: Okay. Sullivan or Abel anyone have any closing thoughts?

Sullivan Barrera: Yes I’d like to thank my team, I’d like to thank HBO, I’d like to thank everybody that’s concerned that has something to do with me fighting Andre Ward. I promise that I will – to all the TV viewers that I will put up a great fight and I look forward to March 26.

David Itskowitch: Thank you. Kathy, anything to say in closing?

Kathy Duva: I want to think you Dave and Roc Nation Sports for the opportunity. And we’re all looking forward to March 26. It’s going to be a blast.

David Itskowitch: Thank you very much. And just in closing I wanted to thank everyone for being on the call today. Thank you to Andre and Sullivan, Kathy, Abel, Luis and everyone that joined us. Again March 26, Oracle Arena, Oakland, live on HBO. If you’re in the Bay Area get your tickets on Ticketmaster now. If you’re not going to be in the Bay Area you don’t really have a good excuse. But if you absolutely can’t be in the Bay Area please tune in on HBO at 9:45 p.m. ET/PT.

Thank you again and we will see everyone next week in Oakland.




ROC NATION SPORTS ANNOUNCES NON-TELEVISED UNDERCARD FIGHTS FOR ANDRE WARD VS. SULLIVAN BARRERA LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT SHOWDOWN ON SATURDAY, MARCH 26 AT ORACLE ARENA IN OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA

NEW YORK, NY (March 14, 2016) – A slate of six non-televised undercard bouts will serve as support when Two-Time World Champion and top-rated pound-for-pound fighter Andre Ward (28-0, 15 KOs) faces undefeated and number one rated IBF light heavyweight contender Sullivan Barrera (17-0, 12 KOs) in a 12-round IBF number one position and mandatory position eliminator at Oracle Arena in Ward’s hometown of Oakland, California on March 26. Opening the HBO® telecast will be Joseph Diaz Jr. vs. Jayson Velez in a 10-round fight NABF Featherweight title fight.

In addition to the exciting televised lineup, some of boxing’s hottest rising stars will be featured on the non-televised undercard including Roc Nation Sports standouts Maurice Hooker, Daniel Franco, Rudy Puga Jr. and Junior Younan along with 2008 Olympic Super Heavyweight Silver Medalist Zhang Zhilei and local favorite Aaron Coley who will all see action on March 26.

Roc Nation Sports will bring names from the entertainment world to the event as well, including notable event emcee, SiriusXM/Shade 45 morning show host of Sway in the Morning, Executive Producer and talent for VH1 & MTV and Oakland-native Sway Calloway, who will serve as the event’s host, and hit master DJ Franzen, resident DJ at Las Vegas’ Hot 97.5 and Drais Nightclub. Sway and Franzen will entertain together throughout the night to keep fans entertained between bouts at Oracle Arena.

Tickets priced at $300, $150, $100, $50 and $25, not including applicable service charges and taxes are available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com (bit.ly/WardBarreraTix) and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000.

On March 26, NABO Junior Welterweight Champion Maurice “Mighty Mo” Hooker (19-0-2, 14 KOs) risks his unbeaten record against Wilfrido “La Roca” Buelvas (17-5, 11 KOs) of Barranquilla, Colombia in a ten-round junior welterweight bout. Hooker, rated number seven by the WBO, is coming off of a career-best win on October 17, 2015 against his toughest opponent to date in Ghislain Maduma (17-2, 11 KOs) at Madison Square Garden. Hooker successfully defended his NABO title with the 10-round decision win over Maduma on the undercard of Gennady Golovkin vs. David Lemieux in a fight that was featured on the event’s “freeview” in the United States and streamed online around the world. Buelvas, a former WBA Fedebol champion, has won two of his last three bouts by knockout and fought Humberto Soto for the WBC Silver International Super Lightweight title in 2014, going the 12-round distance before losing a decision to the former World Champion.

Born and raised in Oak Cliff, Texas, a rough suburb of Dallas, Hooker found a boxing home at Maple Avenue Boxing Gym by way of an outreach program for at-risk youths. His natural talent was soon noticed resulting in him competing as an amateur, during which time he participated in over 100 fights, compiling a record of 97 wins and only 7 losses, with 67 victories coming by way of knockout. Hooker turned professional on April 29, 2011, taking on the vastly more experienced Tyrone Chatman (7-1, 5 KO’s) at the Orpheum Theater in St. Louis. After four rounds, the judges saw the fight 40-36, 37-39 and 38-38, making the fight a split draw. Undeterred, in his next fight on June 24, 2014, Hooker scored his first professional win, knocking out Wilbert Mitchell in the first round at the Dr. Pepper Arena in Frisco, Texas. Eleven wins (eight by knockout) later, he took on undefeated Abel Ramos (8-0, 4 KO’s) on January 17, 2014 in a bout that was featured on ShoBox from the Cook Convention Center in Memphis. After eight close, hard-fought rounds, the judges saw the fight a draw. Hooker followed the draw with a six-round unanimous decision win over Adrian Rodriguez Garza (8-2, 6 KO’s) on April 26 at Fitzgerald’s Casino and Hotel in Tunica, Mississippi. Four consecutive knockout victories would follow before he took on fellow undefeated prospect Eduardo Galindo (10-0-1, 7 KO’s) on June 26, 2015 at the Kay Bailey Hutchinson Convention Center in Dallas for the vacant NABO Junior Welterweight Championship. “Mighty Mo” did not disappoint his legion of hometown fans who saw him capture the title with a sixth round technical knockout victory.

Hailing from Rancho Cucamonga, California and fighting out of the boxing hotbed of Oxnard, undefeated Daniel “Twitch” Franco (12-0-3, 7 KO’s) meets Mexican veteran German “Panteonero” Meraz (52-37-1, 30 KOs) in an eight-round featherweight bout on March 26. Featured for the second time on a Ward undercard, the sharp-boxing Franco will look to improve on his undefeated record against an opponent with literally six times his pro boxing experience. Meraz is only 29 years old but has already logged an amazing 90 professional bouts and has won four of his last six fights by knockout. He has fought current World Champion Juan Carlos Payano, Three-Time U.S. Olympian Rau’shee Warren and highly-touted prospect Gervonta Davis, going the distance with all three.

Franco began boxing at the age of eight, amassing an amateur record of 67-15, winning the Oxnard PAL Championship in 2006 and the California State Silver Gloves Championship in 2007 along the way. During Franco’s professional debut on December 18, 2010, he defeated Emanuel Machorro at Club 401 in Ontario, California via a third round technical knockout. Despite being enrolled as a full-time student at Chaffey College in Rancho Cucamonga, Franco impressed early in his career, compiling an undefeated record with two draws in venues throughout California by the end of 2013. One of those draws came against Alejandro Ochoa at Quiet Cannon in Montebello, California on September 20, 2013, but in a rematch three months later, Franco outmatched Ochoa scoring a six-round unanimous decision victory at Westin Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles. On June 20, 2015, during Ward’s return to the ring at Oracle Arena, Franco saw action in an eight-round junior lightweight bout against Jonathan Alcantara and won by unanimous decision. A hand injury suffered in that bout kept Franco out of action until December 21 when he scored a decision victory over Hector Garcia in Tijuana, Mexico.

A promising unbeaten prospect from Salinas, California, Rudy “The Revelation” Puja. Jr. (7-0, 6 KOs) looks to extend his undefeated streak against Carlos “Kalimba” Lozano (7-5, 4 KOs) of Ensenada, Mexico in a six-round middleweight bout. Puga turned in a career-best performance in his last match-up on February 12 in knocking out Alejandro Osuna (4-2, 2 KO’s) in two rounds at the Double Tree Hotel in Ontario, California. Now, just a little over a month later, “The Revelation” will step into the ring against a tough opponent in Lozanao, a southpaw who has never been stopped and already has a ten-round decision victory under his belt.

Having compiled an exceptional amateur record of 99-8, Puga made his professional debut on September 2, 2011, scoring a fourth round technical knockout victory over Raul Talamontes at the Sports Complex in his hometown. Back in the ring less than two months later, Puga Jr. raised his record to 2-0 with a first round technical knockout of Jose Jesus Hurtado at the Sherwood Inn in Salinas. In June 2012, he sent Thomas Turner to the mat four times in scoring a second round technical knockout win at the Joint at Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. After a little more than a year away from the ring, he rededicated himself to the “sweet science” with a vengeance and on February 17, 2014, Puga Jr. made his comeback stopping Charon Spain in the third round with an overpowering body shot at the Salinas Storm House in his native Salinas. Promotional issues kept Puga Jr. out of the ring for the next year and injuries led to a slow 2015, but Puga Jr. scored a a fourth round technical knockout win over of Katrell Straus on April 24 and a six-round unanimous decision over Juan Carlos Rojas on November 21, both fights taking place at the Double Tree Hotel in Ontario, California.

Brooklyn’s 20-year-old, undefeated Junior “The Young God” Younan (7-0, 6 KO’s) returns to the ring on March 26 after a nine-month layoff to take on Cristian Solorzano (4-7, 3 KOs) of Sonora, Mexico in a four-round super middleweight fight. Younan has battled multiple nagging injuries since scoring a second round technical knockout victory over Mike Sawyer on the Miguel Cotto vs. Daniel Geale undercard on June 6, 2015 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Now 100 percent healthy, Younan looks to make Solozano his third straight knockout victim. Solorzano, a naturally bigger fighter, has campaigned in the light heavyweight division and is coming off of a knockout win.

Younan, trained by his father Sherif, a former professional boxer himself, began fighting competitively at age eight and only two years later was called a “boxing prodigy” by the New York Times. He compiled an amateur record of 90-5, racking up an impressive series of titles along the way including nine Junior Olympic championships, nine Junior Metro championships, eight New York State Silver Gloves championships and five Regional Silver Gloves championships. In 2011, he was crowned National Junior Golden Gloves champion and was U.S.A. Boxing’s number one rated junior boxer in his weight class. Less than a month after his 18th birthday, Younan made his professional debut on November 9, 2013, at the Aviator Sports and Events Center in Brooklyn, New York, stopping Kenneth Schmitz in the first round. Younan would go on to knockout his next three opponents before going the distance for the first time against Azamat Umarzoda on July 2, 2014 at Foxwoods Resort Casino in Mashantucket, Connecticut. He followed that fight with a first round knockout of Marlon Farr on August 13 the BB King Blues Club and Grill in New York on August 13.

Chinese heavyweight Zhang “Big Bang” Zhilei (7-0, 4 KOs) joins the undercard on March 26 in a four-round bout against an opponent yet to be determined. The Silver Medalist from the 2008 Beijing Olympics continues to infuse excitement into the heavyweight division and is coming off of a first round technical knockout win over David Koswara on February 20 at the Lanzhou Sports Arena in Lanzhou, China.

Born on May 2, 1983 in Henan, Zhang began his amateur career in 2003, participating in the World Championships. A breakthrough came in 2007 at the World Championships where Zhang defeated the trio of Nurpais Torobekov, Rustam Rygebayev and Daniel Beahan en route to the semifinals where he lost to Ukrainian Vyacheslav Glazkov. By capturing a bronze medal and finishing the competition in third place, he qualified for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. The Chinese powerhouse nearly reached the zenith of amateur success in the summer of 2008, entering the super heavyweight finals at the Summer Olympics in Beijing against Italy’s Roberto Cammarelle. It was not to be as Zhang suffered his first defeat of that Olympiad, losing to Cammarelle, but proudly adding to the host country’s medal total with a Silver. In 2009, Zhang captured a gold medal at the China National Games, an event of equal prestige to the Olympics in China. 2013 saw yet another gold medal winning performance in the China National Games, setting the stage for “Big Bang” to embark on a professional career while basing himself in the United States. On August 8, 2014, Zhang made his professional debut by scoring a first-round knockout win over Curtis Lee Tate in Fallon, Nevada in a fight that was televised live on ESPN2. On March 14, 2015, Zhang beat Eric George via a four-round unanimous decision at the Armory in Jersey City, New Jersey. He followed that with another four-round unanimous decision win, this time over Glenn Thomas on the highly anticipated Cotto-Geale undercard at Barclays Center in Brooklyn on June 6. Next came a sixth round technical knockout win over Dennis Benson at The Playground in Atlantic City on August 15. To end the year, Zhang was featured on the undercard of the November 21 Cotto vs. Canelo mega-fight at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, where scored a four-round unanimous decision victory over Juan Goode.

Local Hayward, California favorite Aaron Coley (12-1-1, 6 KO’s) faces a very stern test in a six-round junior middleweight bout against Urmat Ryskeldiev (11-3-2, 7 KOs) of West Hollywood, California, a Kyrgyzstan native who is undefeated in his last seven fights.

On March 26, Coley will look follow his most recent victory, a unanimous decision over Jeremy Ramos on January 23 at the Marriott on Broadway in Oakland, with another win in front of his hometown fans. Prior to his January win he scored two unanimous decision triumphs, including his June 20, 2015 performance against Yusmani Abreu (who Ryskeldiev defeated by technical knockout in September) on the undercard of Ward’s last fight. Considered a promising prospect in boxing circles, Coley’s lone loss came via decision to one of boxing’s hottest prospects in Ievgen Khytrov in a bout that was televised live on Showtime’s ShoBox on April 10, 2015 from The Aviator Sports Complex in Brooklyn, New York.

Ward vs. Barrera, a 12-round fight which is presented by Roc Nation Sports in association with Main Events, takes place Saturday, March 26, 2016 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California and is sponsored by Corona Extra, Ticketmaster, Corporate Travel Management Solutions (ctms), Glad, Lyft, Zappos, BodyArmor, SAN Nutrition, Shoe Palace and The Waterfront Hotel. The event will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing beginning at 9:45 p.m. ET/PT. Opening the HBO telecast will be Joseph Diaz Jr. vs. Jayson Velez in a 10-round fight for the NABF Featherweight title presented by Golden Boy Promotions in association with Miguel Cotto Promotions.

For more information, please visit www.rocnation.com, www.mainevents.com, www.goldenboypromotions.com, www.promocionesmiguelcotto.com, www.hbo.com/boxing, follow us on Twitter and Instagram @rocnation, @main_events, @goldenboyboxing, @cottopromotions and @HBOBoxing and become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RocNation, www.facebook.com/MainEventsBoxing, www.facebook.com/GoldenBoyBoxing and www.facebook.com/HBOBoxing.

Follow the conversation on Twitter by using #WardBarrera.

###

ABOUT ROC NATION SPORTS
Roc Nation Sports, a sub-division of Roc Nation, launched in spring 2013. Founder Shawn “JAY Z” Carter’s love of sports lead to the natural formation of Roc Nations Sports, helping athletes in the same way Roc Nation has been helping artists in the music industry for years. Roc Nation Sports focuses on elevating athletes’ career on a global scale both on and off the field. Roc Nation Sports conceptualizes and executes marketing and endorsement deals, community outreach, charitable tie-ins, media relations and brand strategy. Roc Nation Sports launched its boxing division, a full service promotional company which represents Five-Time World Champion Miguel Cotto and Two-Time World Champion Andre Ward, in August 2014. Roc Nation Sports’ roster includes premiere athletes such as Robinson Cano, Skylar Diggins, Kevin Durant, Geno Smith, Victor Cruz, CC Sabathia, James Young, Dez Bryant, Ndamukong Suh, Rusney Castillo, Yoenis Cespedes, Jaelen Strong, Todd Gurley, Wilson Chandler, Erick Aybar, Justise Winslow, Willie Cauley-Stein, Jerome Boateng, Miguel Sano, CJ Prosise and Ronnie Stanley.

ABOUT ORACLE ARENA & O.co COLISEUM:
Oracle Arena and O.co Coliseum, managed by AEG Facilities, are the premiere sports and entertainment complexes in Northern California. These venues are the home of the NBA Champion Golden State Warriors, the NFL’s Oakland Raiders and MLB’s Oakland Athletics as well as host to concerts, family shows and special events. Additional information on Oracle Arena and O.co Coliseum, including a complete schedule of events can be found online at www.coliseum.com. Follow Oracle Arena on Twitter, Instagram, Vine and Snapchat @OracleArena and on Facebook www.faecbook.com/OracleArenaO.coColiseum.




GOLOVKIN’S WORLD TITLE DEFENCE AGAINST WADE EXCLUSIVELY LIVE ON BOXNATION

Gennady Golovkin
Boxing superstar Gennady Golovkin returns exclusively live to BoxNation on Saturday 23rd April when he defends his unified world titles against top undefeated contender Dominic Wade at the Fabulous Forum, Los Angeles.

The pound-for-pound great is back on the The Channel of Champions, headlining an awesome April of fistic entertainment that features Golovkin’s big rival Billy Joe Saunders – with both heading towards a seismic collision this year – defending his WBO World Middleweight title against “Mad” Max Burbank on Saturday 30th April, live from the Copper Box Arena, London.

More big live fight action in April sees the thunderous, punching, all-action, British star Liam Williams defending his British and Commonwealth Super-Welterweight titles against Nav Mansouri on Saturday 2nd April from Harrow, England.

Undefeated Golovkin has destroyed 31 out of 34 opponents – an incredible 91% KO ratio – and the fearsome Kazakh puts his WBA Super, Interim WBC and IBF World Middleweight titles on the line for the 16th time – the second highest in the 160lb division’s history – against Wade and will aim to remain on course for a showdown with Saunders this year to unify all four belts.

Wade, from Largo, Maryland, is the mandatory challenger for GGG’s IBF World title and is undefeated in 18 fights with 12 knockouts. In his last fight he defeated from IBF World Champion Sam Soliman and goes into the showdown against Golovkin looking to cause a tremendous upset.

BoxNation viewers have been treated this year to the world’s best fighters all featuring on the channel with Sergey Kovalev, Terrence Crawford, Andre Ward on March 26th against Sulivan Barrera and now Golovkin.

But on the same card as Golovkin, arguably the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world Roman Gonzalez, the WBC World Flyweight Champion, will defend his title against McWilliams Arroyo.

The Nicaraguan hot-shot has an incredible unbeaten record of 44 wins with 38 KO’s and has left a trail of destruction in the last two and half years with ten-fight KO run.

BoxNation’s Managing Director Jim McMunn is thrilled to have the top three pound-for-pound best: Gonzalez, Golovkin and Kovalev plus the 6th and 9th placed Ward and Crawford all on BoxNation in the first four months of this year.

He said, “That will be some feat to have five of the ten best fighters in the world by April all live on BoxNation and really cements our position as THE channel to watch boxing’s biggest names. Having Golovkin on BoxNation is fantastic, but with Gonzalez also on the card, the number one and two on the planet, it is fantastic for our subscribers to get to see these greats in action, live.”

– Ends –

About BoxNation

BoxNation, the Channel of Champions and proud partner of Rainham Steel, is the UK’s first dedicated subscription boxing channel. For £12* a month and no minimum term customers can enjoy great value live and exclusive fights, classic fight footage, magazine shows and interviews with current and former fighters.

Previous highlights have included Haye vs Chisora, Khan vs Collazo and Mayweather vs Maidana.

The channel is available on Sky (Ch.437), Freeview (Ch.255), Virgin (Ch.546), TalkTalk (Ch.415), online at watch.boxnation.com and via apps (ios, Android, Amazon). BoxNation is also available in high definition on Sky (Ch. 490), at no extra cost to Sky TV subscribers, providing they are already HD enabled.

BoxNation is also available to commercial premises (inc. pubs, clubs and casino’s) in the UK and Ireland, for more information on a commercial subscription please call 0844 842 7700.

For more information visit www.boxnation.com

*Plus £8 registration fee for Sky TV customers.




Video Alert: Andre Ward vs. Sullivan Barrera Preview




ANDRE WARD V SULLIVAN BARRERA LIGHT-HEAVYWEIGHT COLLISION EXCLUSIVELY LIVE ON BOXNATION

Andre Ward Post Fight
One of the world’s greatest fighter’s, Andre Ward, returns to BoxNation exclusively live on Saturday 26th March when he faces undefeated challenger Sullivan Barrera.

BoxNation secures its position as The Channel of Champions with four of the current top ten best pound-for-pound fighters in the world showcasing their skills on BoxNation this year with Sergey Kovalev last month, Terence Crawford this Saturday night and Guillermo Rigondeaux next month.

Undefeated Ward, a former WBA and WBC World Super-Middleweight Champion, and top ranked contender Barrera, clash in an exciting 12-round light-heavyweight contest at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, California, with the winner targeting a prize showdown against Unified World Champion and Russian terror Kovalev.

Oakland native Ward, 32, known as S.O.G (Son Of God), heads into the fight against Barrera with a perfect record of 28 wins with 15 knockouts and is renown for his immense talent, great in-fighting and magnificent defensive skills.

He returns to action at his home arena where he destroyed Paul Smith last June with a brutal and scintillating display, after a year-and-a-half lay off, to cut down the Liverpool fighter in nine rounds, leaving his face a mess with a suspected broken nose.

All-action Ward, the last American boxer to win a gold medal at an Olympics, cleaned up at 168 pounds by winning Showtime’s Super-Six tournament in 2011 with impressive victories over Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham and then Carl Froch in the final. He then smashed Chad Dawson in ten rounds followed by soundly out-pointing Edwin Rodriguez before meeting Smith at a catchweight contest.

On his quest to become a three-time and two-weight world champion and recognition as the best pound-for-pound fighter on the planet, Ward said, “I don’t really have much to say other this: On March 26 it will be very simple. I’ll be in a new weight class against a tough opponent but I’m coming with the same approach. I’ll be in great shape and ready for a battle. Sullivan Barrera has had a lot to say lately and I love it. He’s going to have an opportunity to back up every word that he has spoken. These are the type of challenges I like and on March 26, it’s go time.”

Miami based Cuban Barrera won gold in the middleweight division of the World Junior Amateur Championships in 2000 and in the pros has racked up an unblemished record of 17 wins with 10 coming by knockout.

The 34-year-old has previously won the Interim WBO Latino and WBA Fedelatin titles and has notable victories over Former IBF World Super-Middleweight Champion Jeff Lacy and IBF World Light-Heavyweight title challenger Karo Murat last time out.

Barrera is currently ranked number one by the IBF and would have got a mandatory shot against Kovalev following his knockout victory over Murat, but opted instead to go for Ward with a fight against Kovalev unlikely to happen until the summer.

He’ll be looking to scupper Ward’s plans of meeting Kovalev and instead secure a showdown with his promotional stablemate and is confident of pulling off an upset with top trainer Abel Sanchez, the 2015 Boxing Writers Association Trainer of the Year, in his corner.

“We as a team had a tough choice to make – crash the party by taking out Ward first or wait for the mandatory and take out (Sergey) Kovalev,” said Barrera. “We decided that the time is now. Ward will fall first, and then we will go after the belts.”

Jim McMunn, BoxNation Managing Director, said, “I’m delighted that Ward v Barrera has been added to a packed March schedule for our subscribers. BoxNation continues to broadcast the best fights and the best fighters in the world and we’re two months into the year and by the end of March we’ll have shown four of the top ten best pound-for-pound fighters in Kovalev and Crawford, Rigondeaux and Ward.”

– Ends –

About BoxNation

BoxNation, the Channel of Champions and proud partner of Rainham Steel, is the UK’s first dedicated subscription boxing channel. For £12* a month and no minimum term customers can enjoy great value live and exclusive fights, classic fight footage, magazine shows and interviews with current and former fighters.

Previous highlights have included Haye vs Chisora, Khan vs Collazo and Mayweather vs Maidana.

The channel is available on Sky (Ch.437), Freeview (Ch.255), Virgin (Ch.546), TalkTalk (Ch.415), online at watch.boxnation.com and via apps (ios, Android, Amazon). BoxNation is also available in high definition on Sky (Ch. 490), at no extra cost to Sky TV subscribers, providing they are already HD enabled.

BoxNation is also available to commercial premises (inc. pubs, clubs and casino’s) in the UK and Ireland, for more information on a commercial subscription please call 0844 842 7700.

For more information visit www.boxnation.com

*Plus £8 registration fee for Sky TV customers.




STATEMENT FROM ARTHUR ABRAHAM

Arthur Abraham
This fight is a dream come true for me. I fought in Hollywood, Florida vs. Edison Miranda, against Andre Dirrell in Detroit and vs. Andre Ward in Carson, California. But the flair of a big-time event was missing. I was at Manny’s fight vs. Shane Mosley at the MGM Grand in 2011 and the atmosphere captured my imagination. Afterwards, it was my wish to one day step into this very ring and on April 9 I will finally get the chance to share the spotlight with the “Pac-Man”. I do not take a win that night for granted, as Gilberto Ramirez is a young upcoming boxer from Mexico, one of the greatest fighting countries. He wants to write history by becoming the first Mexican to win a world championship at super middleweight. But myself being an Armenian, living and fighting out of Germany, I have two values to fight for: pride and honor. I will go into this fight with the following words on my mind: “Mejor morir de pie que vivir arrodillado!” This is going to be my greatest victory. Thank you!




TWO-TIME WORLD CHAMPION ANDRE WARD AND UNDEFEATED SULLIVAN BARRERA SET FOR LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT SHOWDOWN ON SATURDAY, MARCH 26 AT ORACLE ARENA IN OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA TELEVISED LIVE ON HBO®

Andre Ward Post Fight
NEW YORK, NY (February 9, 2016) – Roc Nation Sports is pleased to announce that Two-Time World Champion and top-rated pound-for-pound fighter Andre Ward (28-0, 15 KOs) will return to the ring on Saturday, March 26, to begin his assault on the light heavyweight division when he takes on undefeated and number one rated IBF light heavyweight contender Sullivan Barrera (17-0, 12 KOs) in a 12-round bout at Oracle Arena in Ward’s hometown of Oakland, California. The event will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing® beginning at 9:45 p.m. ET/PT.

Tickets priced at $300, $150, $100, $50 and $25, not including applicable service charges and taxes, go on sale Tuesday, Feb. 9 at 5:00 PM PT and will be available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000.

“I don’t really have much to say other than this. On March 26, it will be very simple. I’ll be in a new weight class against a tough opponent but I’m coming with the same approach,” said Ward. “I’ll be in great shape and ready for battle. Sullivan Barrera has had a lot to say lately and I love it. He’s going to have an opportunity to back up every word that he has spoken. These are the type of challenges I like and on March 26, it’s go time.”

“We as a team had a tough choice to make – crash the party by taking out Ward first or wait for the mandatory and take out Kovalev,” said Barrera. “We decided that the time is now. Ward will fall first and then we will go after the belts.”

“Having cleaned out the super middleweight division, Andre’s next challenge is to become the best light heavyweight in the world, and that challenge begins with the IBF’s number one rated contender in Sullivan Barrera,” said David Itskowitch, COO of Boxing Roc Nation Sports. “With both fighters having their sights set on an eventually showdown with Unified Light Heavyweight World Champion Sergey Kovalev, there’s a lot on the line in this fight, but only one man will move on. March 26 is a night of boxing that no fan should miss.”

“I’m excited to be on Team Ward as we enter the light heavyweight division. No weapons formed against us shall prosper,” said James Prince, Ward’s manager.

On March 26, before a hometown crowd, pound for pound star Andre Ward returns to HBO in his light heavyweight debut against undefeated Sullivan Barrera” said Peter Nelson, Executive Vice President, HBO Sports. “With a perfect record dating back to the age of 12 years old, Andre has risen to every challenge as both an amateur and a professional, including world titles and an Olympic gold medal. Now, he takes on Barrera, one of the toughest challengers as Ward moves up the scale. Boxing fans won’t want to miss it.”

Known for his strong character and integrity outside the ring and his warrior’s instinct inside it, Ward’s skill and talent were apparent early in his outstanding amateur career. He racked up every title in the books, culminating with a gold medal in the light heavyweight division at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. As the only male American boxer to claim Olympic gold since 1996, Ward joined the likes of Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard and Oscar De La Hoya. He turned professional on December 18, 2004, scoring a second round technical knockout victory over Chris Molina at Staples Center in a fight that was televised live on HBO. He has gone on to rack up 27 more victories since then, building an ever-growing legion of fans in the process. After becoming the Ring Magazine and WBA Super Middleweight World Champion, rising to the number two spot on the pound-for-pound list and winning the 2011 Fighter of the Year Award (ESPN, Sports Illustrated, Ring Magazine and the Boxing Writers Association of America), it was announced that Ward signed an exclusive promotional agreement with Roc Nation Sports in January 2015, opening a new chapter in his storied boxing career. The Bay Area product returned to the ring on June 20, 2015 at the Oracle Arena in front of his hometown fans in Oakland, California and scored a ninth-round knockout over Paul Smith, continuing his unbeaten streak which dates back to when he was a 13-year-old amateur. Ward recently stepped in front of the camera for a completely different role, a part in the New Line/Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Warner Bros. feature “Creed.” Fellow Bay Area natives, director Ryan Coogler and the film’s star Michael B. Jordan, reached out to Ward so that he could provide his expertise for the film. In addition to working in front of the camera with Ward, Jordan spent time at Ward’s home gym in preparation for his role as Apollo Creed’s son. Now it’s time for Ward to get back to his day job when he faces the undefeated Barrera on March 26.

Born in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Barrera had an impressive amateur run with a record of 285-27. As an amateur, he was able to earn World Amateur Championships in Germany, Cuba, Venezuela and Central America. During his amateur career he also defeated former Light Heavyweight World Champions Chad Dawson and Beibut Shumenov. Following his defection from Cuba, where he was a member of the country’s national team, Barrera made his professional debut in 2009 with a first round technical knockout win over Anthony Adorno in his adopted hometown of Miami, Florida. He would go on to knockout the first five opponents he faced in his professional career in either the first or second round. Barrera made his television debut in January of 2015 with his appearance on ESPN’s Friday Night Fights, when he scored a fourth round knockout win over former Super Middleweight World Champion Jeff Lacy. Barrera quietly rose through the ratings of the light heavyweight division until he was afforded the opportunity to fight former Light Heavyweight World Title Challenger Karo Murat to become the IBF’s number one rated light heavyweight contender. Barrera seized the opportunity, knocking out Murat in the fifth round on December 12, 2015 in his HBO Latino Boxing debut at the Civic Auditorium in Glendale, California. Sullivan is trained by legendary trainer, Abel Sanchez, who is best known for his work with middleweight champion Gennady “GGG” Golovkin. When he is not at The Summit in Big Bear Lake, California training with Sanchez, Barrera resides in Miami, Florida.

Ward vs. Barrera, a 12-round fight which is presented by Roc Nation Sports in association with Main Events, takes place Saturday, March 26, 2016 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California and will be televised live on HBO World Championship Boxing beginning at 9:45 p.m. ET/PT. Follow the conversation using #WardBarrera.

For more information, please visit www.rocnation.com. Follow Roc Nation on Twitter and Instagram @rocnation and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RocNation.

For more information, visit www.hbo.com/boxing, follow on Twitter and Instagram at @HBOBoxing and become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/HBOBoxing.

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ABOUT ROC NATION SPORTS
Roc Nation Sports, a sub-division of Roc Nation, launched in spring 2013. Founder Shawn “JAY Z” Carter’s love of sports lead to the natural formation of Roc Nations Sports, helping athletes in the same way Roc Nation has been helping artists in the music industry for years. Roc Nation Sports focuses on elevating athletes’ career on a global scale both on and off the field. Roc Nation Sports conceptualizes and executes marketing and endorsement deals, community outreach, charitable tie-ins, media relations and brand strategy. Roc Nation Sports launched its boxing division, a full service promotional company which represents Five-Time World Champion Miguel Cotto and Two-Time World Champion Andre Ward, in August 2014. Roc Nation Sports’ roster includes premiere athletes such as Robinson Cano, Skylar Diggins, Kevin Durant, Geno Smith, Victor Cruz, CC Sabathia, James Young, Dez Bryant, Ndamukong Suh, Rusney Castillo, Yoenis Cespedes, Jaelen Strong, Todd Gurley, Wilson Chandler, Erick Aybar, Justise Winslow, Willie Cauley-Stein, Jerome Boateng, Miguel Sano, CJ Prosise and Ronnie Stanley.

ABOUT ORACLE ARENA & O.co COLISEUM:
Oracle Arena and O.co Coliseum, managed by AEG Facilities, are the premiere sports and entertainment complexes in Northern California. These venues are the home of the NBA Champion Golden State Warriors, the NFL’s Oakland Raiders and MLB’s Oakland Athletics as well as host to concerts, family shows and special events. Additional information on Oracle Arena and O.co Coliseum, including a complete schedule of events can be found online at www.coliseum.com. Follow Oracle Arena on Twitter, Instagram, Vine and Snapchat @OracleArena and on Facebook www.faecbook.com/OracleArenaO.coColiseum.




Video: Andre Ward Roundtable interview




ANDRE WARD VACATES WBA SUPER MIDDLEWEIGHT TITLE AHEAD OF MOVE UP TO THE LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT DIVISION

Andre Ward Post Fight
NEW YORK (November 12, 2015) – In advance of his upcoming move up to the light heavyweight division, WBA Super Middleweight World Champion Andre Ward (28-0, 15 KO’s) is vacating his title. Ward originally claimed the belt in November 2009 with a victory over long-time champion Mikkel Kessler in his opening fight of the Super Six tournament.

“I won the WBA belt for my first world title in 2009 and have defended it six times and it’s been a wonderful ride with the WBA,” Ward said. “Gilberto Mendoza and his team have shown me nothing but respect and I’m looking forward to moving up and hopefully winning the WBA light heavyweight belt.”

“Andre Ward has been one of the finest champions in the WBA super middleweight division’s history,” said WBA President Gilberto Mendoza Jr. “We have always been honored to be represented by such a great athlete, gentleman and incredible role model. We wish him the best success in the future and hope we can facilitate the path to him becoming a two-division world champion at light heavyweight.”

Ward’s six successful WBA title defenses came in victories over Allan Green, Sakio Bika, Arthur Abraham, Carl Froch, Chad Dawson and Edwin Rodriguez.

Known for his strong character and integrity outside the ring and his warrior’s instinct inside it, Ward’s skill and talent were apparent early in his outstanding amateur career. He racked up every title in the books, culminating with a gold medal in the light heavyweight division at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. As the only male American boxer to claim Olympic gold since 1996, Ward joined the likes of Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard and Oscar De La Hoya. He turned professional on December 18, 2004, scoring a second round technical knockout victory over Chris Molina at Staples Center in a fight that was televised live on HBO. He has gone on to rack up 27 more victories since then, building an ever-growing legion of fans in the process. After rising to the number two spot on the pound-for-pound list and winning the 2011 Fighter of the Year Award (ESPN, Sports Illustrated, Ring Magazine and the Boxing Writers Association of America), it was announced that Ward signed an exclusive promotional agreement with Roc Nation Sports in January 2015, opening a new chapter in his storied boxing career. The Bay Area product returned to the ring on June 20, 2015 at the Oracle Arena in front of his hometown fans in Oakland, California and scored a ninth-round knockout over Paul Smith, continuing his unbeaten streak which dates back to when he was a 13-year-old amateur. Ward recently stepped in front of the camera for a completely different role, a part in the upcoming New Line/Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Warner Bros. feature “Creed,” hitting theaters on November 25, a few days following fight week. Fellow Bay Area natives, director Ryan Coogler and the film’s star Michael B. Jordan, reached out to Ward so that he could provide his expertise for the film. In addition to working in front of the camera with Ward, Jordan spent time at Ward’s home gym in preparation for his role as Apollo Creed’s son.

About Roc Nation Sports
Roc Nation Sports, a sub-division of Roc Nation, launched in spring 2013. Founder Shawn “JAY Z” Carter’s love of sports lead to the natural formation of Roc Nations Sports, helping athletes in the same way Roc Nation has been helping artists in the music industry for years. Roc Nation Sports focuses on elevating athletes’ career on a global scale both on and off the field. Roc Nation Sports conceptualizes and executes marketing and endorsement deals, community outreach, charitable tie-ins, media relations and brand strategy. Roc Nation Sports launched its boxing division, a full service promotional company which represents world champions Miguel Cotto and Andre Ward, in August 2014. Roc Nation Sports’ roster includes premiere athletes such as Robinson Cano, Skylar Diggins, Kevin Durant, Geno Smith, Victor Cruz, CC Sabathia, James Young, Dez Bryant, Ndamukong Suh, Rusney Castillo, Yoenis Cespedes, Jaelen Strong, Todd Gurley, Wilson Chandler, Erick Aybar, Justise Winslow and Willie Cauley-Stein.




ANDRE WARD FORCED TO WITHDRAW FROM SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21 MIGUEL COTTO VS. CANELO ALVAREZ CO-FEATURE

Andre Ward Post Fight
NEW YORK (November 4, 2015) – Roc Nation Sports regretfully announces that due to an injury sustained while training, Andre Ward will be unable to participate in his previously scheduled Saturday, Nov. 21 bout at the Mandalay Events Center in Las Vegas. A replacement fight for the HBO Pay-Per-View produced and distributed event is currently being worked on.

Ward has been suffering from significant inflammation and constant pain in his right knee that is severely restricting his mobility. He has been advised by his physician to immediately rest and begin rehab on the knee to reduce the inflammation.

“I’m extremely disappointed that I’m missing this opportunity on November 21, but at the same time, I’m encouraged,” said Ward. “Anytime I have had a minor or major setback in my career, by the Grace of God, I’ve come back stronger and this will be no different. I’m looking forward to a big 2016. Thank you to all my fans for your support and patience.”

“Andre’s injury is a huge disappointment not only to him, but all of us involved with this promotion,” said David Itskowitch, COO Boxing of Roc Nation Sports. “We have no doubt that Andre will come back stronger than ever once his knee heals and that he will be a force in the light heavyweight division. We are working diligently to make an intriguing fight that will deliver a level of excitement commensurate with this great event.”

“While we feel terrible for Andre that he has encountered this setback, we have no doubt that Andre will return stronger than ever in 2016,” said James Prince and Josh Dubin, Ward’s management team.




SUPER MIDDLEWEIGHT WORLD CHAMPION ANDRE WARD RETURNS TO THE RING SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21 WHEN HE MAKES HIS DEBUT AT 175 POUNDS

Andre Ward Post Fight
NEW YORK, NY (October 29, 2015) – Roc Nation Sports is pleased to announce that Two-Time World Champion and top-rated pound-for-pound fighter Andre Ward (28-0, 15 KOs) will return to the ring on Saturday, Nov. 21 in the co- feature to the Miguel Cotto vs. Canelo Alvarez middleweight world championship showdown that will be produced and distributed live by HBO Pay-Per-View. Ward has signed an exclusive multi-fight agreement with HBO that will commence with Ward’s Nov. 21 fight at The Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas. Having cleaned out the super middleweight division, Ward, 31, will be making his debut in the 175-pound light heavyweight division against an opponent to be announced.

“HBO is the premier network in boxing and has been a great home to me both as a fighter and a commentator,” Ward said. “I made my professional debut on HBO nearly 11 years ago and I’m excited to move on to this next stage of my career at the light heavyweight division on HBO. My team and I have been hard at work preparing for Nov. 21 and the fans can expect another strong performance in Las Vegas.”

“All of us at Roc Nation Sports are thrilled to partner with HBO as we embark on the next chapter in the storied career of Andre Ward,” said David Itskowitch, COO Boxing Roc Nation Sports. “Starting this multi-fight agreement and Andre’s quest to conquer the light heavyweight division with a fight on the highly anticipated Nov. 21 pay-per-view event is a fitting way to kick things off. We are hopeful that Nov. 21 is the first step toward a 2016 showdown with Sergey Kovalev.”

“From Olympic gold medalist, to two-time world champion, to winning all 28 of his professional bouts and dominating the super middleweight division, Andre Ward has demonstrated that he is among the finest performers in the sport,” said Ken Hershman, President, HBO Sports. “We are delighted to have Andre as part of our family, fighting exclusively on the HBO platforms.”

“Andre is a man of high integrity and honor so we are thrilled to be able to help deliver a multi-fight deal for him on the premier network in boxing,” said James Prince and Josh Dubin, Ward’s management team. “In moving to light heavyweight, we have no doubt that Andre will pick up where he left off in the super middleweight division – as the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world. We are extremely thankful to HBO and Roc Nation Sports for the opportunity.”

Known for his strong character and integrity outside the ring and his warrior’s instinct inside it, Ward’s skill and talent were apparent early in his outstanding amateur career. He racked up every title in the books, culminating with a gold medal in the light heavyweight division at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. As the only male American boxer to claim Olympic gold since 1996, Ward joined the likes of Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard and Oscar De La Hoya. He turned professional on December 18, 2004, scoring a second round technical knockout victory over Chris Molina at Staples Center in a fight that was televised live on HBO. He has gone on to rack up 27 more victories since then, building an ever-growing legion of fans in the process. After becoming the Ring Magazine and WBA Super Middleweight World Champion, rising to the number two spot on the pound-for-pound list and winning the 2011 Fighter of the Year Award (ESPN, Sports Illustrated, Ring Magazine and the Boxing Writers Association of America), it was announced that Ward signed an exclusive promotional agreement with Roc Nation Sports in January 2015, opening a new chapter in his storied boxing career. The Bay Area product returned to the ring on June 20, 2015 at the Oracle Arena in front of his hometown fans in Oakland, California and scored a ninth-round knockout over Paul Smith, continuing his unbeaten streak which dates back to when he was a 13 year old amateur. Ward recently stepped in front of the camera for a completely different role, a part in the upcoming New Line/Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer/Warner Bros. feature “Creed,” hitting theaters on November 25, a few days following fight week. Fellow Bay Area natives, director Ryan Coogler and the film’s star Michael B. Jordan, reached out to Ward so that he could provide his expertise for the film. In addition to working in front of the camera with Ward, Jordan spent time at Ward’s home gym in preparation for his role as Apollo Creed’s son.

###

About Roc Nation Sports
Roc Nation Sports, a sub-division of Roc Nation, launched in spring 2013. Founder Shawn “JAY Z” Carter’s love of sports lead to the natural formation of Roc Nations Sports, helping athletes in the same way Roc Nation has been helping artists in the music industry for years. Roc Nation Sports focuses on elevating athletes’ career on a global scale both on and off the field. Roc Nation Sports conceptualizes and executes marketing and endorsement deals, community outreach, charitable tie-ins, media relations and brand strategy. Roc Nation Sports launched its boxing division, a full service promotional company which represents world champions Miguel Cotto and Andre Ward, in August 2014. Roc Nation Sports’ roster includes premiere athletes such as Robinson Cano, Skylar Diggins, Kevin Durant, Geno Smith, Victor Cruz, CC Sabathia, James Young, Dez Bryant, Ndamukong Suh, Rusney Castillo, Yoenis Cespedes, Jaelen Strong, Todd Gurley, Wilson Chandler, Erick Aybar, Frances Tiafoe, Justise Winslow and Willie Cauley-Stein.




Kovalev deflects talk about Ward, calls Stevenson a piece of bleep

By Norm Frauenheim-
Sergey Kovalev
CARSON, Calif. – Light-heavyweight champion Sergey Kovalev said he didn’t watch Andre Ward’s comeback victory over Paul Smith and instead concentrated on his July 25 title defense against Nadjib Mohammedi.

“Empty talk right now,’’ Kovalev said Saturday during an hour-long session with reporters before a card featuring Timothy Bradley-Jessie Vargas at StubHub Center.

The internet is on fire with speculation about a Ward-Kovalev fight in the wake of Ward’s ninth-round stoppage of Smith on June 20 in Oakland, Calif.

The unbeaten Ward, a ringside analyst for HBO Saturday night, is still deliberating about whether he’ll move to light-heavy or stay at super-middleweight. He fought Smith at a catch-weight, 172 pounds. The guessing game is that Ward is moving toward a big-money showdown against either Kovalev or middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin.

Kovalev manager Egis Klimas said he did watch Ward’s comeback, his first bout in about 19 months.

“He’s interesting,’’ Klimas said. “He’s a different kind of fighter. A very good fighter.’’

Klimas also foresees a Ward-Kovalev showdown, which he says would be “the biggest fight for Sergey.’’

Meanwhile, Kovalev, who faces Mohammedi in a mandatory defense at Las Vegas Mandalay Bay, had plenty to say about Adonis Stevenson, who holds the WBC’s version of the light-heavyweight title.

Kovalev, who is training in nearby Big Bear, continued to call Stevenson a piece of excrement.

“Because he’s running from me,’’ Kovalev said.




The talented, the untalented, and the Nipsey Hussle

By Bart Barry
Andre Ward Post Fight
Saturday on BET, American super middleweight world champion Andre Ward made his much-needed return to boxing, stopping in the ninth round a hapless but stubborn Brit named Paul Smith, right about the time NBC served its viewers a terrible main event called “The Battle for Ohio”, from Las Vegas, that ended with welterweight Shawn Porter decisioning Adrien Broner by refreshingly wide scores. Before his match with Ward, Smith baldly missed weight and got himself beaten bloody for the indiscretion. Before their opening bell, Broner and Porter verbally antagonized one another, then spent 35 of 36 minutes hugging it out.

Adrien Broner’s defense is an atrocity. It took Marcos Maidana to indicate this a ways back, but Shawn Porter offered its definitive proof in round 1 of their Saturday scrum. After feinting Broner into a retreat – one doesn’t say Broner was feinted out of position, since, defensively, he’s never in position – Porter pursued Broner in a sort of relenting-wildman style Porter employed the entire match, and Broner, whose hands and feet obey autonomous, often-competing masters, leaped backwards and threw his arms directly upwards. When Porter’s punch landed and nearly touched the back of Broner’s head to his C1 vertebra, Broner had both white gloves overhead – in a feat of contorted defenselessness not seen in televised fighting since Marco Antonio Barrera slammed Naseem Hamed’s face on a Las Vegas turnbuckle 14 years ago.

Sensing his stick-em-up pose would not disarm Porter so much as a lackadaisical mugger, Broner immediately, and relentlessly, employed his backup plan: Unrepentant hugging. There’s a reason this worked, sapping Porter of what energy a formless volume puncher like him needs to be effective: Broner has disproportionate upperbody strength even for a welterweight (or whatever weight he now campaigns at). Porter badly wanted to punch Broner, but he was generally unable to, both because Porter is nearer to being bad at boxing than good, and because when Broner got his head and arms in a variety of grappling holds, Porter stopped churning his feet and merely tried to outwrestle Broner.

Before one criticizes Porter’s dad for not telling his son to free his hands with his feet, one pauses, in observance of both Fathers’ Day and regression to the mean, to impart: Andre Ward is just about the only athlete left in prizefighting who knows how to do this. Mediocre as his work may be with most everyone else he’s touched, trainer Virgil Hunter deserves much credit for what fantastic work he did teaching Ward how to fight.

How good it was to see Ward back in a prizefighting ring!

Rusty? Yup. Older? Sure. Less effective punching a cruiserweight than a super-middle? Of course. Likely to lose more than three rounds to Gennady Golovkin in a 12-round fight? No way.

Ward is a serious professional. It was a relief, in this sense at least, to see a man in an exhibition match who wouldn’t foul it up with hotdoggery, sloppiness or boredom. Ward punished Paul Smith for coming in at Chavezweight in his BET debut, also BET’s boxing debut; it was indeed cathartic, however cruel and misplaced the catharsis, to watch Ward make Smith repent for the ordeal of a prefight Nipsey Hussle concert.

Saturday, Nipsey stretched the boundaries of imitative talentlessness to a point at which they’d have snapped even 20 years ago; Nipsey Hussles have always existed, but hip-hop’s natural selection – or, heavens, any selection – did not accommodate them until recently. The nature of the hip-hop business is such that new acts must be discovered for each Tuesday release, and there are not, nor have there ever been, that many talented lyricists in America. (Friday evening in Dallas, LL Cool J will headline a show that features Big Daddy Kane and Doug E. Fresh and Whodini and Sugarhill Gang, and it’s instructive to ask, before the first Nipsey apologist draws breath: Is there another iteration of the known universe in which even a creative record-label executive imagines Nipsey Hussle headlining a concert in 2045?)

If these days I read like a curmudgeon, I’ve made my peace with it. The same element, time, that led a once-sprightly optimist to curmudgeonhood, anyway, is what, in part, PBC relied on to draw ratings for its godawful Saturday show. I watched the fights with a couple Puerto Rican friends from the boxing gym, and after fast-forwarding through much of the undercard offerings – NBC helpfully juxtaposed an excellent U.S. Olympian, Errol Spence, with a dreadful one, Terrell Gausha – we all kept reminding ourselves how wonderful it was this unwatchable bore of a main event was on free television, in an unthinking application of a childhood metric. In the digital era, network television mostly means more ads and scripts written round selling things, but for a certain, later portion of the demographic PBC aims at there is still nostalgic meaning in hearing an event will be broadcasted by NBC or CBS or ABC.

Take the pros with the cons, then, say the cons, because if they’re talking about us, they’re promoting us. True that. It’s one of only two things Broner did well Saturday – along with applying a left-hooked tag to Porter’s floating chin at the top of round 12: Respect the brand. Having lost widely to a competitor who lacks most every one of his gifts, Broner was reliably, and durably, self-aggrandizing in defeat. While intellectually incapable of aping anything else Floyd Mayweather tried to teach him, Broner unwaveringly applies one idea that enriched Money May: Tariffs exacted from men who wish to see my bitch ass beat to death look the same on a spreadsheet as fees gratefully paid by admirers.

Bart Barry can be reached via Twitter @bartbarry




Nieves and Young battle to draw

Andre Ward Post Fight
Andre ward came back after a 19-month layoff to batter Paul Smith and score a 9th round stoppage at the Oracle Arena in Oakland.

Smith was cut above his right eye in round eight. In round nine, Ward started batter Smith to the point where his face was a bloody mess and the fight was stopped at 1:46 of round nine.

Ward, 171 3/4 lbs of Oakland, CA is now 28-0 with 15 knockouts. Smith, who came in 4 1/2 lbs over the 172 pound weight limit at 176 1/2 lbs is no 35-6.

Ward outlanded Smith 231-47.

Undefeated Jr. Featherweights Antonio Nieves and Stephon Young battled to an 8-round split draw.

Nieves won a card 77-75. Young took a card 78-74 and a thired card read even at 76-76.

Young, 122 3/4 lbs of St. Louis is 13-0-2. Nieves, 120 1/2 lbs of Cleveland is 12-0-1.




Ward ready for a test drive, a look at his future, in comeback

By Norm Frauenheim-
WARDCut
Andre Ward’s return from a 19-month layoff Saturday night comes at a time when he has to come back. Everybody’s prime comes with an expiration date. It’s hard to know how close Ward is to the end of what he has done so well, perhaps better than anyone among the leaders in today’s pound-for-pound generation.

At 32, however, it’s time to find out. His comeback bout against journeyman contender Paul Smith at Oakland’s Oracle Arena in a BET-televised bout provides a look at what he still has and at what he might still accomplish.

“The game plan is to razzle, dazzle, be explosive and do it all,’’ Ward said after a workout Tuesday.

Yet, it’s clear that the bout against Smith, defeated by Arthur Abraham in his last two outings, is a test drive. It’s happening at a catch-weight, 172 pounds, four more than the super-middleweight division Ward dominated before contract problems and a shoulder injury. It’s three pounds less than light-heavyweight.

Against Smith, Ward will get an idea where his career goes next. Gennady Golovkin at 168 pounds? Or Sergey Kovalev at 175? For now, Kovalev looks more likely. Golovkin appears more interested in the winner of a projected bout between Miguel Cotto and Canelo Alvarez for a piece of the middleweight title.

There was also an internet dust-up. On a Russian website, the usually polite Golovkin ripped Ward for suggesting that he was lying when he said he’d fight Ward at 168 pounds.

“You haven’t been interesting for a long time,” Golovkin was quoted as saying in response to Ward. “Everyone already knows what you are, and, because of this, they do not go to your fights. As a man, you are dead to me.”

If the quotes are accurate – and GGG has yet to deny them, it sounds as if chances at Ward-Golovkin are dead, too. But if the Floyd-Mayweather Jr.-Manny Pacquiao fight proved any thing, it showed that no deal is ever dead if money and interest are there.

That brings us back to Saturday night. It all depends on how Ward looks against Smith, a UK super-middleweight known for toughness and little else.

Ward might be at an age when he can no longer make 168, which would probably end the Golovkin possibility. GGG is already a small middleweight. It would be a stretch for his to fight at 168. Anything more than 170 looks unlikely. That would mean Kovalev, a Fight of the Year in any year.

Ward (27-0, 14 KOS) has been reluctant to talk about anything beyond Smith (35-5, 20 KOs), his first bout since his career was shelved in a contract dispute with late promoter Dan Goossen. He has no idea how he’ll react to his first opening bell in nearly two years.

“We’ll make adjustments along the way, but there isn’t a specific game plan for Paul Smith,’’ Ward said. “I think you are going to see everything come Saturday night. I’m not going to force it. I’m just going to let it flow.”

Mostly, Ward sounds as if he’s relieved to move beyond a stage in his career – his life – that left him unsure about what was next. He said he even thought about retiring. Twice, he said during a conference call, he planned to announce his retirement.

But now he’s anxious and energized for a second chance to fulfill the potential that has been oh-so evident since his 2004 gold medal, the last Olympic god won by an American boxer.

In retrospect, it might have been more lesson than layoff.

“Was it uncomfortable? Yes,’’ Ward said. “Did I hate every moment of it? Yes. But did it force me? Did it teach me? Absolutely. So, no, I wouldn’t have changed anything.

“And we’ll see Saturday night about the layoff.’’

And the future.




Andre Ward & Paul Smith Transcript of Conf Call

WardWins300
Roc Nation Sports hosted an international media conference call on Monday, June 15 with Olympic Gold Medalist and reigning WBA Super Middleweight World Champion Andre Ward (27-0, 14 KO’s) and former World Title Challenger Paul Smith (35-5, 20 KO’s) of England. Below is a transcript of the international media conference call.

Ward vs. Smith, a 12 round bout presented by Roc Nation Sports, takes place Saturday, June 20 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California, will be televised live on BET and streamed globally on TIDAL.com at 10:00 PM ET/7:00 PM PT and is presented in association with Matchroom Sport. The fight is sponsored by The Waterfront Hotel, Venue Kings, Shoe Palace, CTMS Travel, U-BOAT, FanDuel, Fandango, Q 102.1, 95.7 the GAME and KBLX 102.9. In addition to the great action inside the ring, the event will feature several notable Roc Nation touches that will further serve spectators with an enhanced fan experience, including Nipsey Hussle taking to the ring for a special performance prior to the main event. The event will be hosted by notable emcee Sway Calloway and will also feature hit master DJ Franzen who will serve alongside Sway throughout the night. Tickets priced at $250, $125, $90, $60 and $30, not including applicable service charges and taxes, are on sale now and available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000. Doors open at 3:00 PM, the first fight begins at 3:15 PM and the BET telecast and TIDAL.com stream begins at 10:00PM ET/7:00 PM PT.

For more information please visit www.rocnation.com. Follow Roc Nation on Twitter and Instagram @rocnation and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RocNation.

MEDIA: Credential Requests: http://berkcommunications.com/request.php

David Itskowitch: Thank you, everyone, for joining us this afternoon. Welcome to the Andre Ward versus Paul Smith Conference Call. My name is David Itskowitch. I’m the Chief Operating Officer of Roc Nation Sports – Boxing. Ward versus Smith takes place this weekend, Saturday, June 20 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California and will be televised live on BET and streamed live globally on TIDAL.com at 10:00 PM ET/7:00 PM PT. The fight is presented by Roc Nation Sports in association with Matchroom Sport and sponsored by The Waterfront Hotel, Venue Kings, Shoe Palace, CTMS Travel, Q102.1, 957 The Game and KBLX 102.9.

In addition to the main event, we also have an intriguing co-feature pitting two undefeated prospects against each other in Cleveland’s Antonio Nieves and Stephon Young of St. Louis in an eight-round featherweight fight.
In addition to the great action inside the ring, the event is going to feature several notable Roc Nation touches that will enhance the in-arena experience for fans and those watching on TV and on BET and on TIDAL, including Nipsey Hussle taking to the ring for a special performance prior to the main event.

The event will be hosted by notable emcee Sway Calloway from Oakland and will also feature hit master DJ Franzen who will serve alongside Sway throughout the night.

Tickets starting at $30 are still available through Ticketmaster. We urge everybody to get their tickets as soon as possible. This is obviously a very exciting time in Oakland with the Warriors poised to capture their first world championship in 40 years. We’re really thrilled to be a part of the excitement that the city is feeling right now and proud to be part of what could really, really, really be a special week in the city of Oakland.

We have the participants in the main event on the call today. Now to say a few words and introduce Paul Smith. I’d like to turn it over to Eddie Hearn, who is the managing director of Matchroom Sport.

Eddie Hearn: Thank you, David. And thanks, everyone, for tuning in to the call today. It’s a pleasure to be coming to Oakland. Thank you to Roc Nation Sports for giving Paul Smith this opportunity. It’s a pleasure to be working with you guys for the first time. This is an interesting time for the Super Middleweight Division in Britain, obviously spearheaded for such a long time by Carl Froch. Obviously James DeGale winning the IBF Super Middleweight Championship recently against Andre Dirrell, George Groves challenging Badou Jack and some great young fighters coming through as well as Paul Smith’s brother, Callum Smith, who’s fighting for the WBC Silver Title next week and Rocky Fielding another undefeated fighter, as well as Marty Murray as well to sum it up moving up to the middle.

So it’s a really good time. And Britain seems to have the cream of the crop in the division right now in terms of numbers. And Paul Smith is another one you can add to that list, coming up the back of two fantastic performance against Arthur Abraham the first, many believe he won the fight; the second, he put up a great fight and has really established himself at the world level.

We know Andre Ward, one of the best pound for pound fighters in the world, absolutely no doubt. Let’s be honest. If there’s ever a time to fight Andre Ward, it’s right now. And Paul Smith, who has had a stellar career and a real resurgence in the last couple of years, has massive confidence through the Arthur Abraham fight. He’s an intellectual fighter who studies the sport. And we’ve taken this fight 100% to win this fight. We appreciate how tough this fight is. But I think Paul Smith is a very, very live fighter in this fight on Saturday night.

Andre Ward, as I said, is a magnificent fighter, but right about now, he’s inactive, and of course the pressure to perform as well exists. We really like Paul Smith showing this fight and we can guarantee one thing he’ll bring all the action, all the passion and 100% desire to win on Saturday night. So it’s a pleasure to be part of the broadcast, the show and the fight and we look forward to coming to Oakland

And I’d like to pass over to Paul Smith to say a few words.

Paul Smith: Yes, no problem. As Eddie mentioned, it’s a pleasure to be asked to fight someone like Andre Ward and it’s good to be part of an event like this and fighting back in the States. I had the privilege of fighting over here before and it’s great to come back again on this big stage. That will be fantastic and I’ve said time and time again. We kind of respect the way of Andre Ward and I thank him for giving me the shot. I’ll give every last thing on that to try and do that.

Operator: And our first question comes from Dan Rafael at ESPN.

Dan Rafael: Thank you very much. Hey, Paul. How are you guys today? David? Hey, Paul. Here’s my question. Eddie touched on a little bit about that if there was ever going to be a time to maybe get Andre would be coming off of what will be about a 19-month layoff. He’s been very, very inactive over the last, you know, couple of years. Can you talk about what you think that layoff may make him look like? Because he’s been spectacular. I mean, he, you know, he beat Carl easily. He’s dominated the Super Six Tournament and was really just not even losing rounds against guys. But now it’s been almost two years. So what are your thoughts about, you know, being in the right spot maybe at the right time to maybe pull the upset?

Paul Smith: I can’t speak for Andre himself because, you know, I don’t know him. Truly, I know of him and I’ve watched him time and again. I was an Andre Ward fan. I’m sure I’ll be an Andre Ward fan after it. But inactivity isn’t good for any fighter and any fighter will tell you that and you have to stay busy and all the trainers and the gym, it’s totally different. And any fighter will tell you the same. It’s that when you’re in the ring and getting in there under the light it doesn’t matter about rounds and activity or inactivity. On fight night, it’s fight. This is fight night where I believe you do need that and, of course, I need every advantage I can get. You know, as Eddie said before, every advantage I can get in this fight and the advantage that’s come from this one is Andre Ward’s inactivity and that’s what I can capitalize on Saturday night.

Dan Rafael: Also, Paul, do you feel like because you’re two fights in a row prior to this you traveled to Germany to fight Abraham, in particular very close fight. It seems though that judges don’t quite see it that way.

Paul Smith: Yes.

Dan Rafael: But the point is now you went to Germany, you went to the lion’s den over there and fight Abraham on his turf and coming to United States to fight Andre in his hometown. But does the fact that you’ve done that before going to somebody else’s backyard where it’s all their fans, all their promotion and other people make you much more mentally strong than the average fighter that may not have ever done? In other words, when you get to Oakland, you know, it’s going to be another walk in the park because you’ve been in the other guy’s place, you know, more than one time.

Paul Smith: Yes, possibly. You know, I’m in Oakland now and a lot of people just said it’s exactly like Liverpool a little bit. It’s late and we’ve been enjoying ourselves. I think I fight best away from home and I think I’ve proven that in time. So there’s no pressure with this fight especially when you’re away from home. There’s no pressure. There’s no pressure to perform. I do feel to perform better away from home and you’re in a hostile crowd. It doesn’t really bother me. And I’m sure any fighter with any decent level, it wouldn’t better them. You know, once you’re in that ring and the bell goes, it’s just the two of you and the crowd seems to fade out a little bit. You know, the hostility I’m sure I’ll be okay with that.

Dan Rafael: Just one other question for you, Paul. The fight is not really middleweight fight. I’m told the max weight is 172 pounds.

Paul Smith: Yes.

Dan Rafael: You’ve been fighting super middleweight and below for your whole career as does Andre. Do you think that makes any difference? Are you okay with being that heavy or is that no big deal for you? What is your perspective on this stuff being a little bit over your normal weight?

Paul Smith: Yes. I think any fighter makes it in weight limit all the time will probably like an extra pound or two. You know, it was just the case of what the fight was. You know, it was not a catchphrase. And that’s why it’s off of that. There was no real room to negotiate. You know, it’s just is what it is. Yes, yes, that’s what we need to fight.

Dan Rafael: All right, very good, Paul. Thank you very much. Good luck on Saturday. Good luck on Saturday.

Paul Smith: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from Flattop with Fight News.

Flattop: Good day, Paul and Eddie. This is Flattop. Paul, what is your strategy? You know, Ward is used to winning every round of a fight. He’s a complete boxer. And with your fight with Abraham, I mean, you’re able to get in there and rough it up with him a little bit. You plan to make it into more of a brawl or do you want to make it – keep it up a test of skills or boxing match?

Paul Smith: I don’t think many in the world are 160, 168 or 175 are going to outbox Andre Ward. You’re going to make it – going to beat him in a boxing match and a chess match, so to speak. There’s so many fights where Andre Ward is being involved in a rough fight himself. He’s tougher than people give him credit for only stuff that he makes out as well I believe and, you know, he likes to nullify your way and he likes to make you fight his fight. I’m not saying that I’m an exception to this, that I’m better than anyone he’s fought. By any means, you have to fight and box that’s tactical. You have to time, make an attack. We believe we got a decent game plan for Saturday night and we plan to implement it.

Flattop: Tell me a little bit, Paul, about your trainer. How long have you been working with him, what his accomplishments are and what he’s going to prime you for on fight night?

Paul Smith: I’ve been with Joe now for four years and it’s been the best four years. And I don’t see that as a coincidence, I’ll be honest. He’s unbelievable and the passion he has – he’s the first one in the gym and he’s the last one to leave. He has long days and he doesn’t take fighters unless they’re going to go all the way and he’s just got attention to detail which I haven’t seen before in a trainer. He’s passionate about the fighters and he gives his 110% every time and every session. His accomplishments speak for themselves. He’s the best prospective in British boxing. He’s got Scott Quigg, the Bantamweight Champion and he loved many more – other world champions. He’s a quality fighter who gives – as I said, he gives 100% to his fighters.

Flattop: Sounds magnificent. Who’s working with you on your mental game?

Paul Smith: No one. To be honest with you, I have sports just a few years back and every now and then, I do believe that the boxing game is a very mental game and you need to weigh on your mental senses. I believe I’m mentally strong anywhere now and experience has probably made me mentally stronger and it’s just going right for me at the minute.

Flattop: Yes, I remember watching you in the British version of The Contender.

Paul Smith: Yes.

Flattop: You did well in that, too. Was that your first time on the big stage and, of course, this Saturday, you know, you’d be on the biggest stage.

Paul Smith: Yes.

Flattop: How do you see your progress that you’ve made since The Contender to where you’re at now? Do you think that being on The Contender is what jumpstarts your career?

Paul Smith: Possibly it gave me a bigger fan base and it gave me more of an idea on what to expect in boxing on the broad scale. You know, everyone wants to top bill in Vegas or top bill in the States and – against a good fighter and, you know, I’m not just saying that because of me. That is what the British fighters aspire to do. You don’t want to just spend your lifetime in Britain and everyone wants to get over to the States and top the bill in Vegas and that’s probably the childhood dream alongside being a world champion. So the fact that I’m over – topping the bill in the States against one of the best fighters in a tough pound for pound, in my opinion, is a great achievement in my opinion.

Flattop: Well, thank you, Paul. And, Eddie, any comments from you, sir?

Eddie Hearn: Since we’ve signed, you know, a little ran out and then he fought also Abraham twice and then fought – and then Andre Ward. So he’s been in a real tough run. But, you know, one thing about Paul is he knows Abraham. And as far as how much he thinks he’s been from those fights, he realized there’s much he learned on Saturday night because you don’t really necessarily appreciate how much you’ve learned until you get in that situation again. There’s been nearly every week. So he’s used to the attention. He’s used to the limelight. He knows how the business works. He knows how the sport works. So it will be on Saturday night and it’s a big occasion. But, you know, he’s seen George Groves in front of 80,000. He fought in front of 12,000 in Germany, booing him. And it’s not really like one of those experiences Paul never seen before because he has been around the sport a long time. So it’s just really about execution of the game plan on Saturday night, not even the skills of Andre Ward because everybody knows, it’s not a secret. It’s not that he’s going to go inside. We know how good this guy is. But, you know, he’s got a game plan. He’s smart enough to execute that game plan. It’s all up to whatever works on Saturday night.

Flattop: I agree with you. Those fights after Abraham were good training and they…

Eddie Hearn: …he’s had those fights, you know, in what will be probably nine months he brought Abraham and Andre Ward. Now there’s not many super middleweights like that. I mean he had a tough loss in the Abraham 2 fight. It wasn’t one of those fights where, you know, he took a lot of punishment. So I think he’s fresh. I think he’s probably the best prepared, mentally and physically and experience-wise for the fight that he’s ever been, any stage in his career.

Flattop: Paul, the Arthur Abraham, your second fight with Arthur Abraham was only four months ago.

Paul Smith: Yes.

Flattop: Did you suffer – and I did watch it but it was unfortunately on my computer. It didn’t come in well. Did you suffer any injuries? Are you fully recovered?

Paul Smith: I have an elbow problem which was probably before the first day of fight, on the second day fight but it gave me no problems in the fight. I can’t use it as an excuse because it wasn’t. It just needed fixing and I had a quick heal. And I’ll just say, you know, that’s no problem. I had some bones shaved off in the elbow to stop the pain. The jolt was getting there when I was jabbing but that’s all. Apart from that, I didn’t get any injuries. Just the usual wear and tear that you get from a hard fight. You know, I needed a little bit of rest, two weeks, three weeks rest and I was going straight back in.

Operator: Our next question comes from Mark Whicker from Los Angeles Daily News.

Mark Whicker: Over the years, when you watch Ward fight and you sort of realize being in there with him and what you might be able to do that no one else have been able to do against him.

Paul Smith: To be honest, I’ve never visualized being in the ring with Andre Ward. That route was for the likes of other fighters who reached levels of world title, world champions, you know, at the end of the day. I was offered the fight that came up and I was never going to say no to a fight with Andre Ward. I love to get in there and sign me against the best. So when I came in, I’ve watched him over the years. I’ve watched his style. I think he is a very good tactical fighter and for a chance to go against him is big for me. You know, I’m delighted. I’m very happy. And I’m looking forward to Saturday night. He’s almost perfect and he’s a very good fighter. He’s been here before. He’s been down before. It’s so hard to predict the defense and Ward doesn’t go pick a fight with Abraham. It’s a different fight. It’s a different style for me. And I will train twice for the one fighter on the balance of two fights. You know, it’s a nice, refreshing change to go against someone else with a different style, albeit Andre Ward.

Operator: Our next question comes from Eddie Goldman from No Holds Barred.

Eddie Goldman: Thank you very much. Hello, everybody. Paul, let me ask you about the attention this fight is getting. It’s the first fight staged in the US on BET and they’re going to stream this on TIDAL, Sky Sports in the UK. It has the return of Andre Ward after this layoff. How much does that inspire you to give, you know, perhaps the best performance of your career?

Paul Smith: It inspires me a lot. I know what it is and I know what it’s about. So because it is Andre Ward’s comeback. It’s not Paul Smith’s comeback after being on fight and I know the attention is not on me. The same attention I receive in the UK for this fight is what I got the previous fight. Last time it was Germany and a lot of you were tuned in, in Germany. There were around 9 million viewers watching the fight in Germany. Again, none of that causes pressure but it does inspire me.

Eddie Goldman: In the past, Andre Ward has called himself a chameleon. He’s been more of a boxer against Carl Froch, more of a brawler against Sakio Bika, adapting to the different styles. How are you going to factor that into your game plan that he can fight in so many different ways?

Paul Smith: Yes, he does and he does it well. I’ve said this before when we’re talking about a fight, I will adopt to whoever I’m fighting because you can’t win with one game plan and one style and expect to win against everyone. So chameleon, what he said, is a good example and a good analogy of that. I always say I adapt and fit the game plan of Andre Ward – if he comes out to fight and to brawl, we have to combat that as well. So there’s different ways – I’m still waiting to see which Andre Ward comes out from the night whether he’s going to box with the fight, whether he’s going to turn.

Eddie Goldman: Okay, thank you. Good luck in the fight.

Paul Smith: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jake Donovan with the BoxingScene.com.

Jake Donovan: Hey, Paul. I know you said before you don’t want to compare yourself to any of Andre’s opponents, not, you know, trying to put yourself above any of them. But what can Andre expect from you that he hasn’t seen yet in his career? But what can he expect from you without, I mean, necessarily giving away your game plan?

Paul Smith: He probably has seen most styles. He’s won a gold medal. So he’s probably seen a lot of it and I’m going to try and do some of it a little bit different than what he’s probably been expecting out of me on Saturday night. It is about unknowns as well for me, you know, getting in there because we don’t know which Andre Ward we’ll expect, whether he’s going to come out and fight, whether he’s going to come out and box.

Jake Donovan: All right. As far as 172 catch weight, what advantages does it pose for you? Because I know you’ve gone back and forth between weight, you know, you decide a little heavy I think for non-title and then you have to come down when you have to fight for the title. What advantage does it pose for you fighting a little bit heavier than super middleweight?

Paul Smith: It’s just probably a bit of breakfast. It just makes it a little bit easier at 168, obviously.

Jake Donovan: Anything spectacular we can expect from the ring?

Paul Smith: No, just the usual what you get with me. Same style, same boots. It’s always the same music as well in the ring walk.

Jake Donovan: Cool. Best of luck, Paul.

Paul Smith: Thank you.

Operator: We do have one final question. And it comes from Javier Gorbea with the Newspaper Claredad.

Javier: Hi, Paul. Paul, he hasn’t been that active over the last couple of years. How can that benefit you? And can you talk about the fact that he hasn’t fought in a long time?

Paul Smith: Yes, we said this, inactivity isn’t good for any fighter, I do believe, even if he’s good as Andre Ward. So that first round, it’s not the same feeling as sparring with headgear on. You know, you need to just maintain your level as a fighter, in my opinion. So, of course, I’m hoping to capitalize on that and every advantage in my favor is more than welcome.

David Itskowitch: All right, I think that’s it for you, Paul and Eddie. If you have anything you guys want to say in closing, the floor is yours.

Eddie Hearn: No, just looking forward to Saturday. Like I said, without doubt inactivity can only be a negative. One thing we know it can’t be a positive. Very unlikely that Andre Ward will be as good on Saturday night as he was in his last competitive fight or particularly in the Super Six Final against Carl Froch. So a wonderful fight, a great talent and don’t be surprised to see another UK victory in America right now. We don’t very often come to America and lose. So bear that in mind, David…

David Itskowitch: You lose the big ones, though. Remember the War of Independence? You lose the big ones.

Eddie Hearn: It’s a long time since then. I look forward to it, mate.

David Itskowitch: All right. See you guys later this week. Thanks again.

Paul Smith: Thanks, David.

David Itskowitch: All right. Now turning things over to the Andre Ward portion of our call. He captured the gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games and the last American boxer who had brought home a gold medal. His list of vanquished foes reads like a who’s who of the Super Middleweight Division, including Carl Froch, Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham and Sakio Bika, all of whom he defeated en route to winning the Super Six. He also dominated and knocked out former Light Heavyweight World Champion Chad Dawson in their 2012 showdown. He is the pride and hope of Oakland, California, a family man, and in an age when athletes are not always the best role models. He’s someone that you want your children to emulate.

He embarks on the next chapter of his career this Saturday night as he makes his highly anticipated return to the ring against Paul Smith. It’s my pleasure to introduce the reigning WBA Super Middleweight World Champion with a record of 27 and 0 with 14 KOs, from Oakland, California and an athlete that all of us at Roc Nation Sports are proud to represent, Mr. Andre Ward. Andre?

Andre Ward: Thank you, David. How are you?

David Itskowitch: Good. How are you doing?

David Itskowitch: All right. You want to say a few words before we turn it over to questions?

Andre Ward: Just excited to be back on a conference call for a week of a fight. It’s been a while. We’re starting to feel like, you know, the fight is around the corner. Obviously, it is around the corner but I’m starting to feel those emotions again since it’s been 18, maybe 19 months. So just happy to be back and excited to take any questions you guys have.

Operator: Our first question is from Dan Rafael with ESPN.

Dan Rafael: Thank you very much. Hello, Andre.

Andre Ward: Hey, how are you doing there?

Dan Rafael: I’m good. Welcome back. I know it’s been a while since you fought. I’m wondering during the course of the time when you were out of the ring, you know, you talked a little bit about it when you made your agreement with Roc Nation Sports, you did some interviews and we talked a little bit about it. But how much did you miss boxing and just – and the anticipation of, you know, whether it was going to the training camp or the actual fight night or the attention that was on you, that sort of thing? How much over the last 19 months did you miss that and how much are you looking forward to basically getting back in the groove, you know, and restarting your career, which was obviously going very, very well?

Andre Ward: Oh, yes. I mean, obviously it was devastating, you know. And in my profession and in my job, I’ve learned to plant a poker face, you know, pain and discomfort and different things like that. So, I didn’t really let on to a lot or talk about a lot because I just didn’t think it would be appropriate. We have the legal battle going on and, you know, every word is being taken literally and I just have to be very careful about what I say publicly. But it was very devastating to the point where, like I said before, and this is just not a line, you know, for you guys but I really wanted to walk away. I didn’t want to walk away but was on the verge of walking away because I didn’t see any light at the end of any tunnel. I noted behind the scenes regardless of what was written. I did all that I could do to sort of rectify the situation after it was underway and try to settle something that was reasonable that everybody could live with and it’s just one thing after the next. I literally wrote two retirement speeches because I didn’t want it to end on anyone else’s turn but myself. So if that’s what it was going to take, then that’s the route we’re going to take. And fortunately, you know, every time I got to that point, someone in my life, my past would tell me “it’s not time…I understand your frustration but, you know, just wait this out, it’s going to end at some point” and it finally did.

And as far as just, you know, missing, the positive that I was able to broadcast and be around the fans and when something like that happens human nature is to stay away from people not be seen and not want to be around it. But, I had to be there because I have a job to do and obligation to HBO, but I wanted my fans to see me and talk to me. Professionally this was one of the most uncomfortable situations I’ve ever been in because that’s what it’s really all about. And now that I’m back, that made me stronger. I have a greater appreciation for the sport. I didn’t think I could have a good appreciation but I do. And I prepared for this fight and I’m excited.

Dan Rafael: So, Andre, do you have, you know, any regrets about going into this situation? Because, you know, it was a choice to go into a legal fight that some people may have done it differently, perhaps they may have just played out the contract and then gone their separate ways. Other people maybe did what you would have done which is to fight and try to extricate yourself from that situation. Do you have any regrets and how do you think of that 19-month layoff physically when you’re in the ring will affect you on Saturday night?

Andre Ward: I mean, I could have – I could have accepted a lot of things along the course of my career and it doesn’t mean that – I mean, you can’t always look for the road that’s the easiest to travel. I mean, it’s just not a reality. Any professional sports, you know, any time you’re willing to trail blaze a new task or step out and take the lead there’s going to be opposition. I don’t care what it is. And I don’t base my decision solely on how easy it’s going to be. If that were the case, I wouldn’t be in the sport that I’m in now because this is very grueling physically, you know, mentally and the whole nine. So, you know, we made an educated decision and sought counsel before I made the decision for multiple people. I prayed about it. I thought about it. But ultimately, you know, the Book stopped with me. You know, I had the final say and I didn’t know exactly what was going to be on the other side but I believe what I was fighting for, again, regardless of what was written because everyone didn’t have the full narrative or the full story. It would not have changed anything. It’s something I had to go through. I got through it. It should have been my faith and my relationship with God. You know, it brought me and my wife closer and it just shows you a lot of things. It brings the sport of boxing into reality because when you’re no longer a commodity for individuals, sometimes the phone stops ringing. And certain people continue to call. Many people rallied around me personally and then there was some that was distant because there was no money to be made, there was no fight on the horizon and all those things are good. Those are life experiences. Was it uncomfortable? Yes. Did I hate every moment of it? Yes. But did it force me? Did it teach me? Absolutely. So, no, I wouldn’t have changed anything. And we’ll see Saturday night about the layoff. I mean what compounded this last layoff was the first layoff.

That made this layoff even worse because I came off of I think 11 months or somewhere around there with a shoulder injury and I thought I was on my merry way after the Rodriguez fight and then, boom, I’m hit with another layoff. So all I can do is what I could do which was, you know, dedicate myself, focus and as you look at some of the greats like Floyd Mayweather, Ali took three years. I mean, these guys, they come back and they may not be at their best. I mean, Floyd took two years off and took a guy in Juan Manuel Marquez who was a little bit smaller than Floyd but if Floyd wasn’t on point, he would have some problems with Marquez. So it’s not out of the question. I love that Eddie Hearn and his whole team, they’re banking on that. But if that’s their game plan, they got the wrong game plan come June 20.

Dan Rafael: Andre, one other question, the fight contract did 172 pounds, you’ve never been a guy that’s ever really had issues making 168 where you’re the champion. But are you doing that 172 because this is the first step toward you making that move that we talked about for years eventually to becoming a light heavyweight?

Andre Ward: I just think selectively everybody decided that this is the best move to make. You know, why go to 68 right now? Just see what you feel and for two reasons. Yes I can make 68. I haven’t had any issues making – and I think to my credit until I show that I have some issues I’ve never missed weight. I’ve never come close to missing weight. Until I show that I have some issues, I think it’s safe to say that I can make 68 with no problems. But then it’s also just a gauge in a barometer to see how I feel. Is it time to move up or do we go down to 68? So you have that – your question is accurate. Plus, it’s just to ultimately see how I feel overall.

Dan Rafael: All right, very good, Andre. Thank you very much and welcome back and good luck Saturday.

Andre Ward: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from Mark Whicker with the Los Angeles Daily News.

Mark Whicker: Hi, Andre. Going back to what you said earlier about the layoff, how much has that built the urgency to – in your career to get the big fights and to get the form that you proven that you deserved? And also when you talked about fighting at light heavyweight, you know, you look at Kovalev and Stevenson and those guys. And then at 168, maybe there’s eventually a guy like Golovkin to come up. How much motivating things are those fights?

Andre Ward: They are very motivating. It’s what we’re in this sport for. I mean, there’s definitely a place for tune-up sites to get into groove and get your body back. But ultimately, I think I’ve shown this throughout my career, ultimately, you want the biggest fight and that’s, only citing the best in the division. And I don’t think it’s realistic to do that fight in and fight out. I don’t think that’s smart either. But, you know, at some point in time, you have to go with those guys and, like I said, throughout my whole career, I’ve done that. And me fighting those eight-level, other champions, former champions, top contenders, they came back for me because of the Super Six and then obviously the Chad Dawson fight and even Edwin Rodriguez. So I just want to see where my body is after this fight and continue to get my body fat measured, continue to see what my body is as a whole and how I feel. And then when we go up to 75, we’ll make that decision if we stay at 68. It’s always about ultimately getting the best fight. But the reality is I can’t make these guys fight me. And all I can do is be in a position to be ready. And the only thing I believe stopping me from pay-per-view is just having the right dancing partner.
And right now, I don’t have a slew of components that can make for pay-per-view fight but I just have to continue taking a fight at a time and I think at the right time, those things are going to happen.

Mark Whicker: When you look at – and a lot of fights, fans are always looking at the next great fight and trying to project things and even as analyst at ringside, I’m sure you guys have the same thing. You know, when people who look at Ward possibly versus Golovkin or Ward versus Kovalev and it’s that great matchup of the matador and the bull. I mean, how – is that kind of the way you look at those slides, too? The styles might make those classic fights if they ever happen?

Andre Ward: I don’t want to talk too much about these guys because all I can think about is Paul Smith. And that’s no cliché. I’m glad he started talking this week because I was getting a little worried. I hadn’t heard anything coming out of the UK. So I’m happy he did that. It’s not that I needed any more motivation but a little bit extra. I think if you watch my fight that I like to be the full time. I think either one of those fights are great matches, yes.

Operator: Our next question comes from Flattop with Fight News.

Flattop: Oh, good day, Paul. You mentioned social media with allowing you to reach out to your fans and for the fans to reach out to you. Do you see social media playing a big role with fighters such as yourself and not only hyphen you or popularizing you but also just give you more insight to the fans? And plus, talk a little bit about your HBO broadcast. Is that something that you want to look at as a career afterwards? Because you did a great…

Andre Ward: Appreciate that. Thank you. With social media, you have to stay on top of social media, so social media does not stay on top of you. I’ve seen that you have to evolve with the times and you have to kind of keep up with the pace or you kind of get left behind. So, of course, the different outlets that we have to connect with fans and supporters alike, it’s essential that you stay up to speed, like I said, and you stay current because in a lot of cases, many people, at least certain demographics are not obviously reading newspapers or going online to read the news. You know, they’re all on social media. Some people get their news from Twitter alone or Instagram alone or Facebook alone. So you have to do those things. Those things definitely allowed me to continue to stay in contact with my fans. You know, I answer personal questions and different things like that.

I listed the things that I envisioned doing and becoming andbobviously there were some smaller goals like national championship, the bigger goal of winning the 2004 Olympic gold medal and becoming a broadcaster because my favorite fighter of all time and the first fighter that ever caught my eye was Roy Jones. And obviously, he was a fighter and he was a broadcaster and I wanted to be just like Roy. And so, I love broadcasting. It’s a passion of mine. I don’t take it for granted. I’m grateful for HBO to give me this job because it’s at the highest level and I’m thankful for guys, like Max Kellerman and all the individuals who have mentored me, continue to mentor me and continue to help me on this. I truly want to get better.

Flattop: It seems like you’re spreading yourself out and lately, you’ve been getting back into sort of the Hollywood heart of being a boxer, you know, throwing the ball out at the Oakland A’s game, being on The View. But it seems like you’re getting back into the stretch of being that pound for pound fighter, one of the superstars of boxing. When you look at boxing today and you look at the people who are the superstars, you know, the Mayweather’s, you know, where does it go from there? But do you see the sport has been half full or half empty? Do you see the sport now with a lot more boxing on television? Do you see that as a big positive? Do you see that the sport kind of bringing itself back like a resurrection?

Andre Ward: And just to back up really quick, I want to give a shout out, too, because he’s one of my first mentors and he still mentors me and I really appreciate that. We need a veteran in the sport. And when it comes to broadcasting, he gives me critiques and he’s done a great deal to help me in my broadcasting career. But, yes, I mean, I’ve always looked at the sport like it’s half full. I never buy into the headlines that say boxing is dead. I feel like boxing has been around for many, many years, obviously long before, I was born and it’s going to be around long after I leave. I just think boxing is one of those fixtures all around the world that will never go anywhere. Do we have our issues internally? Yes. Do we get a lot of criticism? Some of it is warranted. Some of it isn’t. But I like the steps that are being taken right now to just as a whole, get everybody involved, every network, every promoter, every manager to try to support the sport and the fighters, individuals who are getting in there and taking the physical risk. You know, they’re getting compensated like they should and they’re getting exposure like they should because we know that the more exposure you get, the bigger you become. So I like what the sport is and I just think we just need to keep pushing, keep moving forward.

Flattop: So you and Miguel Cotto are the flagship fighters for Roc Nation. David, let me ask you a question, too. Miguel Cotto coming off at his victory. Andre Ward posed for another stellar showing, what are your plans for Ward if he is successful on Saturday? And is there a possibility of seeing a mega super card with both of these guys on it?

David Itskowitch: With respect to plans for Andre, we’ve kicked around some ideas as a team, here at Roc Nation and with his management team, James Prince and Andre himself. A lot of what we do will be dictated by how Andre feels coming out of the fight on Saturday night, how we feels about his weight, how he feels about the performance that he gave, obviously how he looks. So we have a few different paths that we’ve been talking about. Saturday night will go a long way towards helping us to dictate what path we go. But, the goal is for Andre to fight in big fights, in marquee fights. And, you know, that’s the direction that we’re headed. It’s just the question of what the road is based on how things go on Saturday night. With respect to Andre and Miguel fighting on the same show…

Flattop: Oh I know that’s a big dream.

David Itskowitch: Yes. I think economically, that might be a little difficult.

Flattop: No, it’s just wishful thinking on my part.

David Itskowitch: Crazier things have happened. I’ll never say never. But, you know, just economically, that’d be something that would be pretty difficult to pull off.

Flattop: And not to take away from Andre at all but, you know, congratulations with Cotto there.

Operator: Javier, with Newspaper Claridad, please go ahead.

Javier: Hi, Andre. The people seem to think that you won’t be as sharp because of the layoff. What’s your answer to that? But you talked a little bit about wanting to do pay-per-view fights. How do you see that becoming a reality in 2015?

Andre Ward: I’ll answer the second question. Yes, I totally think it’s a reality in 2015. Again, it’s just about finding the right dancing partner at the right time. That’s the key. Very rarely do you see somebody just come on the scene and they can just jump into a pay-per-view fight, especially when it’s their first one. So I’m just in a unique spot where we have to find the right opponents and we have to find opponents that are willing to step up and that can also carry their end up of a pay-per-view fight. But again, those are the types of things where I just try to let those things just happen. As a team we talk about these things and strategize but to a degree, you just have to let life happen and let these things just come into play. And it’s okay. It’s okay that people feel like I’m going to be rusty. People have to talk about something, right? It’s really interesting to me that Paul Smith is really kind of hanging his hat on that. I was really surprised. And I thought he was a little bit smarter than that when I met him in New York a few months ago. But apparently, that’s what they’re banking on. And I think he’s in for a rude awakening come Saturday night because I’m going to be very sharp. I’m going to be hitting harder than I think he realizes. I’m going to be stronger than I think he realizes. And I don’t know who he got his advice from.

Javier: One last thing there, Andre. This will be the first fight on BET, who is doing boxing for the first time. I know you want to go to HBO. But how much do you see that being on BET will help you get bigger in order for you to become a pay-per-view star when you go back to HBO?

Andre Ward: My team will sit and talk to HBO after this fight. And they will figure out what the next step is. I don’t think this is a downgrade. I don’t think this is anything bad. I think this is just for this particular fight, just moving in the different direction which is a good direction. You have to realize that BET is in over 92 million homes. Probably a good number of those people aren’t diehard boxing fans. And that’s ultimately what it’s about because typically, the diehard, they’re going to follow you wherever you go. So I’m not worried about that. I just have to take advantage of the situation I’ve been given. And you have to look at one thing like even The View. The View came about because of BET, because we announced my fight on a BET platform and bumped into Whoopi Goldberg. And Whoopi Goldberg took a liking to Roc Nation Sports’ publicist and they followed up week-in and week-out to make it happen. And so those things happen when you venture out and you do new and different things. So I’m excited about it. I’m thankful to BET for what they’re doing. I’m thankful to Roc Nation Sports because they work around the clock. I don’t think anybody at Roc Nation Sports gets the full eight hours of sleep at night. I doubt it. Because they’re constantly working, they’re constantly pushing, they’re constantly working on their phones and just trying to make things happen and then making things happen. And my job is to prepare, like I have. It’s a beautiful thing when you come to fight week and you know that you haven’t cut any corners. I didn’t cut corners on any run. I didn’t cut corners on any sparring session. Every round for me counted. Every day counted. And I’m more than prepared for anything Paul Smith brings to the table. I just think this fight isn’t going to go the way he anticipates it. And I say that with all do respect. But I just think he’s going to be hit early. And he’s going to realize very quickly like, “Man, this isn’t the guy that we scouted on paper.” It’s a little bit different.

Operator: And our next question comes from Eddie Goldman with No Holds Barred.

Eddie Goldman: Thank you very much. Hi, Andre. It’s good to see you getting back in the ring.

Andre Ward: Thank you.

Eddie Goldman: I want to ask you about this stage of your career because from the amateurs through the Olympics, through your pro career. There were zigs and zags. But there’s never been this kind of layoff, this kind of separation between a fight. So it really represents to me a new chapter – a beginning of a new chapter in your career. Tell us about what you envision for this fight and the next several years in your career and what you plan to do, say, to get that Mayweather-type status.

Andre Ward: We draw a lot of things around, I mean, just a boxing community as a whole. We draw, you know, pay-per-view star out there like you walk around the corner and become that. You know, we draw the Mayweather status around. We draw the Manny Pacquiao status around. And we just have to stop for a second and realize what went into that, what these guys had to do. And I’m talking a handful of guys that you can count on one hand in the last 10-12 years that we’re able to pull something like that off.

You look at Floyd Mayweather. Look how long he was champion and how long he reigned as champion before he got Arturo Gatti, his first pay-per-view fight. And then things began to snowball and pick up. And then he got his Oscar De La Hoya. And then he got his Ricky Hatton. And then, you know, Floyd worked extremely hard to go from Pretty Boy Floyd to Money Mayweather. He did his part. And there were a lot of things that worked out right for Floyd, obviously a lot of physical hard work. He did his part and then he had the proper fight and then he took off. Same thing happened with Manny. Manny brought his country here. Manny, you know, brought the Philippines here and he had a massive following. And he did his part. If you look at Canelo, Canelo brings his country here, Mexico. If you look at, you know, Oscar De La Hoya, Oscar De La Hoya is Mexican-American. And what Oscar had was very rare. You look at Tito Trinidad. Tito Trinidad brought his country here. Floyd, American, it takes time. And it’s not an easy feat to become a “pay-per-view star.” And in my opinion, a pay-per-view star is not just someone who participates in one or two pay-per-view shows. The pay-per-view star is someone who can command the pay-per-view time in and time out regardless of who they fight.

And I’ve been a professional over ten years now. And I’ve heard one guy after the next say “I’m next in line.” I’ve heard one promoter after the next tell their guy, “It’s the guy.” But there was a handful of guys. And there’s only one American probably in the last ten years. I mean you have to draw Oscar in this. See I don’t remember how long Oscar had been retired. But since I’ve been a professional, probably Oscar and Floyd are the only two guys that you can say that are from America, where you consider them bona fide pay-per-view stars out of all the fighters.

So this isn’t just something we can, as a team, Roc Nation Sports, my men, we can’t just concoct and just make it happen. And because it hasn’t happened at this stage of my career doesn’t mean that something is terribly wrong. I mean you have to look at all of the fighters that are active and that are fighting right now. And there’s yet to be a bona fide pay-per-view star from America. You have a handful. Like I said, Canelo. You have Manny Pacquiao. You have Tito Trinidad. You have a handful of guys. I’m sure I’m leaving somebody out.

So this is a long way to say that we just have to keep fighting. And we just have to keep doing what we do. And hopefully the right opponents will come at the right time. And then I’ll become as big as I’m supposed to become. But in the interim, I don’t want to squander what I do have. I have influence now. I have reach now. I have a fan base now that I have to be cognizant about and give them my all. So I don’t want to make it seem like there’s this feat up here or everything else just doesn’t make sense, you know, like everything else just is not worth anything. It’s just not like this. So it takes time. It takes effort. It takes a lot of things falling into place. And then if it happens, then I’ll be as happy as anybody. But I got to stay focused and keep doing what I’m doing fight by fight.

Eddie Goldman: Obviously you have a different personality and a different kind of person than Floyd Mayweather and Pacquiao for that matter also. Do you think that the Super Six Tournament that you had a couple of years ago – how do you look at the legacy of that? Because when you went into that, some of us thought you had a real good chance of winning. But I don’t think it wasn’t real obvious at the point and you ended up cleaning everybody out. Tell us about the legacy of that tournament and how that can help you propel yourself in the next stage of this career.

Andre Ward: Well, I think the Super Six as well as the Chad Dawson victory has given me the status that I have in this sport. Nobody remembers anything before that. So, it’s key moments like that in your career that do make you, because obviously it was unprecedented. It was something that has never been done. And then, obviously, the reality, the television aspect of it where you get to come into our home and get into our lives and see who we are as people. That had never quite been done like that. And we had some hiccups. But we got through it. We ended up having the Canelo hit and then the rest is history. So the Super Six, along with the Chad Dawson fight I think is the core of what made me who I am today.

Eddie Goldman: And who do you see perhaps in the future? I know you don’t want to look past Paul Smith. No fighter does that. But you said you need dance partners for the pay-per-view fight. Who are some of the people that might be on your radar? And not just from United States, from the UK or around the world.

Andre Ward: I don’t know, it’s hard to say. From my experience, a lot of times, pay-per-view likes fights that should really be on pay-per-view, the fights that the fans deman. They’re fights that you didn’t just concoct and pick and say, “Hey, that’s the perfect guy.” It’s typically a matchup that fans are clamoring about and fans are demanding. We just have to let that take its course and we have to let it happen. I’m not going to make any in bold claims about anything because this is not my goal obviously.

You know, I’ve had a phenomenal career. I make a great living. I don’t talk about the money I make. I mean I’ve got some – I’ve got a great team in terms of my endorsements. The things that I’ve been able to do and accomplish just in my lifetime, being a professional fighter and a world champion, I just never imagined. So I just got to let life take its course and let my team do what they do. But again, all that matters right now for me – and that’s a great question that’s asked. It’s just Paul Smith because if there’s no Paul Smith victory, then all of these things are on the backburner. And I can’t allow that to happen. So, look for spectacular performance Saturday night against a tough game opponent. Don’t miss it.

Operator: And our next question comes from Mark Whicker with the Los Angeles Daily News.

Mark Whicker: Andre, what do you think you learn from being a ringside analyst that? You’re a student of the game, anyway. But what do you think you picked up that might help you be more refined in the ring?

Andre Ward: I get two or three days before I have to be at a particular venue to call a fight. I have a stack of literature and background information about the fighters. It could be two fights on the card that we’re calling, sometimes three fights, sometimes more. And mentally, I have to dig in there and kind of go back and follow a guy’s career up until the point where he is in that particular day. And that just keeps me fresh and keeps me sharp from a mental standpoint and then also ringside.

You know I’m a genuine boxing fan. And I will probably say my brother had more talent than I had and probably could have been better than me. But he didn’t love it, didn’t like it. I love this sport. So when he was downstairs at 11 years old watching cartoons, I’m watching Tuesday Night Fight. I was enamored with the sport.

And when I sit ringside and I call the fight up close, you see the kind of punches that are being thrown. You can read the fighter’s mind. There’s just a lot of different little nuances that I’m picking up on. And I’ve learned that, along with my ringside work, my analyst work, as well as just how I am as a person, when I’m away from the gym, I’m constantly taking mental notes about how I can get better. I’m consumed with the sport because I’m so competitive and I just love it so much.

And that translates in the gym. Sometimes I’ll go to the gym, I could maybe be off a couple of weeks and say, “Man, I still feel sharp. I still feel good because my mind was always on the sport.” It wasn’t on partying and going here and doing this and that. I’ve always been engaged.

So the analyst work reflects how I was raised as a young fighter and knowing that I have to stay connected to the sport. All of those things help when you have a layoff like I’ve had. And I think that people are going to be really surprised on Saturday. I’m not going to say that there’s not going to be any ring rust. I am human. But I don’t think it’s going to be the kind of ring rust that Paul Smith and his team is banking on.

Mark Whicker: One last thing. How excited are you about the Warriors?

Andre Ward: I’m ecstatic. It’s storybook. It really is. Mark Jackson, the previous coach, did a great job of giving these guys a foundation and getting them to a certain point. And then Steve Kerr came. And he’s just doing unbelievable things as a rookie coach. Not many people expected the regular season that they had. And they’ve had very few hiccups. And they’ve responded like champions. And I think that it’s our year. I mean, you have take your hat off to LeBron James who’s single handedly carrying this franchise to this point. And he’s still fighting. It’s not over yet. He’s still kicking. And he knows what it would mean to Cleveland to bring a championship back there. But it means just as much to us here in the Bay Area after a 40-long-year drought to hoist that trophy and then bring a championship here.

Plus, when I was on The View, and I’m not superstitious, but I got a chance to hold “The Trophy.” I just hope that helps a little bit. I hope that’s kind of a prelude to what’s getting ready to happen that one Bay Area kid got a chance to hoist that trophy up and down. I think in a few days that the Golden State Warriors will do the same.

Operator: And we do have a question from Kirk Jackson with the Boxing Insider.

Kirk Jackson: As mentioned before, this fight is going to be in Oakland. It’s your hometown. And obviously there’s a big buzz going with the Warriors playing where they are. This fight is also going to be streamed on TIDAL. It’s going to be the first fight on BET Networks. You, along with Miguel Cotto are the main guys representing Roc Nation Sports. And he recently knocked out Daniel Geale. Do you feel like there’s any added pressure for you to perform in spectacular form this upcoming Saturday?

Andre Ward: Not really. Miguel put on a great performance in his fight. I thought he would put on that kind of performance. He’s a veteran. I’ve looked up to Miguel for years, watched him when he started at 140. And to see him with the longevity that he’s had, still at the highest level, is amazing. I tip my hat to him.

No, there’s no direct competition. I mean, as a competitor, I want to put on a great show for Roc Nation Sports, for BET, for my manager, my lawyers, my team, just for my fans. I want to put on a show from that aspect. But this is boxing. A show may be dazzling the fans for 12 rounds. It may be a first round knockout. It may be a middle round stoppage. It just depends, you know. But the goal is to obviously win. And the second goal is to win. So, I can’t put that kind of pressure on myself to go out there and try to compete with Miguel Cotto. That wouldn’t be the right thing to do.

Kirk Jackson: Is there anything about Paul Smith’s style that concerned you?

Andre Ward: I don’t know if concern is the right word. I mean there’s respect there. I think that what I’ve learned to do over the years is even give back in my mind more respect and more kudos than maybe they’re entitled to just to make sure that I don’t have a mental letdown in my preparation. And I just expect a fighter who is obviously banking on some kind of ring rust. He stated in the media that he just fought ten weeks ago and he’s still in shape. One thing he’s going to realize — and his promoter should know this, too, because we’ve been on the opposite side of the ring before — is that I don’t take anybody lightly. I don’t think tune-up has been used in this training camp the whole time we’ve been preparing. I just won’t allow it because there’s really no such thing. If Paul Smith beats me on June 20, he earned it, he deserves it, and I tip my hat to him. But it’s not going to be easy.

David Itskowitch: All right. Well thank you, everybody. Andre, a few closing thoughts before we end the call?

Andre Ward: I’m just happy and excited again for this event. We’re days away. I’m so thankful to Roc Nation Sports for the job that they do all the time. They’re always on point. They’re always working. Just everybody on the Roc Nation Sports team. I don’t want to start naming people because I’ll leave somebody out.

My lawyer, Josh Dubin and James Prince, they work tirelessly. People don’t always realize that it takes a lot of work to get those things done, including this event, for going up against an NBA final. We’re not directly competing with the Warriors but indirectly, we’re kind of battling with the Finals. And my team is persevering through that. And the best way I can thank them is to perform Saturday night and go out there and give it my best and just put on the best show that I possibly can.

David Itskowitch: Well said. Well thank you to Andre, to Paul, Eddie Hearn, the media that dialed in today. Again, Saturday night, June 20, Oracle Arena in Oakland, California, Andre Ward versus Paul Smith, live on BET and streamed live globally on TIDAL, 10:00 PM ET /7:00 PM PT. Tickets are still available starting at just $30. Everybody, get out there at your Ticket Master locations, ticketmaster.com or call 800-745-3000. Looking forward to a really, really exciting week in Oakland. It’s something that the city hasn’t seen in quite a few years. So we’ll see you all in Oakland. And thanks again.




ROC NATION SPORTS ANNOUNCES SPECIAL PERFORMANCES AND UNDERCARD FIGHTERS FOR JUNE 20, 2015 ANDRE WARD VS. PAUL SMITH throne boxing EVENT AT ORACLE ARENA IN

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NEW YORK – JUNE 10, 2015 – The highly anticipated return to the ring of WBA Middleweight World Champion and Olympic Gold medalist Andre Ward (27-0, 14 KO’s) against former World Title Challenger Paul Smith (35-5, 20 KO’s) of England on June 20 has been elevated to another level with the announcement that the event will now include a live musical performance by Los Angeles-based rapper Nipsey Hussle immediately before Ward and Smith do battle. Fans will also be able to catch the action and performance live on BET Networks in the United States and globally on TIDAL.com, the newly launched music streaming service that combines the best high fidelity sound quality, high definition music videos and expertly curated editorial.

Tickets priced at $250, $125, $90, $60 and $30, not including applicable service charges and taxes, are on sale now and available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000.

In an intriguing televised co-featured bout pitting two unbeaten prospects against one another, Cleveland native Antonio Nieves (12-0, 6 KO’s) and Stephon Young (13-0-1, 5 KO’s) of St. Louis will battle it out over eight rounds in a featherweight bout. Cleveland has been known as a hotbed for producing promising boxers, including undefeated prospect Nieves who was a highly touted amateur, winning over 60 fights while becoming a five-time Cleveland Golden Gloves champion, a National Golden Gloves silver medalist and competing in the Olympic Trials. 28-year old Nieves made his professional debut on November 12, 2011 securing a unanimous decision against DeWayne Wisdom at La Villa Banquet in Cleveland, Ohio. Nieves has continued to rack up victories picking up five wins in a busy 2014, including three by knockout. In his last outing, less than two weeks ago on June 6, Nieves earned a first round technical knockout win over Gabor Molnar at Presque Isle Downs Casino in Erie, Pennsylvania. On June 20, fellow undefeated prospect Young will look to end Nieves’ winning streak. Also a decorated amateur who rose as high as a number two national ranking and narrowly missed making the 2012 U.S. Olympic Boxing Team, Young made his pro debut on August 12, 2011 with a unanimous decision victory over Ricky Lacefield at Ameristar Casino in Saint Charles, Missouri. Young’s undefeated run continued most recently on March 27 against Jesus Gonzalez with a second round technical knockout at The Ambassador in Saint Louis, Missouri.

In addition to the action inside the ring, Roc Nation Sports will bring other major names to the throne boxing experience at Oracle Arena including notable event emcee, radio personality, MTV news correspondent and Oakland-native Sway Calloway, who will serve as the event’s host, and hit master DJ Franzen, resident DJ at Las Vegas’ Hot 97.5. Sway and Franzen will entertain together throughout the night to keep the energy up between bouts.

There will be several notable faces ringside ready to catch all the action on June 20 including WBC and Ring Magazine Middleweight World Champion Miguel Cotto, Michael B. Jordan, Frank Gore (Indianapolis Colts), Colin Kaepernick (San Francisco 49ers), E-40, Brice Butler (Oakland Raiders), Marcell Reece (Oakland Raiders), James Jones (Oakland Raiders), Too Short and Ryan Coogler.

In non-televised undercard action, Milwaukee, Wisconsin’s undefeated prospect Luis “Cuba” Arias (10-0, 4 KO’s) will make his second appearance of 2015. Arias began boxing at the age of seven and compiled an amateur record of 140-25, earning U.S.A Boxing’s number one men’s junior ranking in 2006, the number one men’s under-19 ranking in 2008 and the number one men’s ranking in 2010. He captured the U.S.A. Men’s Under-19 National Championship in 2008 and two U.S.A Men’s National Championships in 2009 and 2010. Arias’ professional debut took place on November 10, 2012 at Staples Center in Los Angeles where he defeated Josh Thorpe via a four-round unanimous decision. He began 2013 with three victories, all by knockout, which were followed by a decision win over DonYil Livingston on May 4 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. He closed the year with three more victories including a second-round knockout of Cameron Allen in his first scheduled eight-round fight. In his most recent bout on March 14 at Coliseo Roger L. Mendoza in Caguas, Puerto Rico, Arias defeated Zachariah Kelley when Kelley was disqualified in the second round for repeated low blows. On June 20, he’ll look to keep his winning ways going in a six round super middleweight bout against an opponent to be determined.

Local Hayward, California favorite Aaron Coley (9-1-1, 6 KO’s) joins the undercard looking to come back from his first professional loss which came via unanimous decision against the highly touted Ievgen Khytrov at Aviator Sports Complex in Brooklyn, New York on April 10 in fight that was televised on Showtime’s ShoBox. He will look to get back on a winning track on June 20 when he takes on Yosmani Abreu (4-9-2) of Las Vegas, Nevada in a six round junior middleweight clash.

Hailing from Riverside, California and fighting out of the boxing hotbed of Oxnard, undefeated junior lightweight Daniel “Twitch” Franco (10-0-3, 7 KO’s) began boxing at the age of eight, amassing an amateur record of 67-15, winning the Oxnard PAL Championship in 2006 and the California State Silver Gloves Championship in 2007 along the way. During Franco’s professional debut on December 18, 2010, he defeated Emanuel Machorro at Club 401 in Ontario, California via a third round technical knockout. Despite being enrolled as a full-time student at Chaffey College in Rancho Cucamonga, Franco impressed early in his career, compiling an undefeated record with two draws in venues throughout California by the end of 2013. One of those draws came against Alejandro Ochoa at Quiet Cannon in Montebello, California on September 20, 2013, but in a rematch three months later, Franco outmatched Ochoa scoring a six-round unanimous decision victory at Westin Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles. In his most recent bout on January 17, he scored an impressive first-round knockout win over Sergio Najera at the Oceanview Pavilion in Port Hueneme, California. On June 20, Franco, who recently signed an exclusive promotional agreement with Roc Nation Sports, will see action in an eight round junior lightweight bout against Jonathan Alcantara (7-13-2, 1 KO) of Los Angeles, California.

Another product of the Bay Area, Oakland’s Tony Hirsch (18-6-2, 8 KO’s) captured the vacant WBC United States Middleweight Title against then-undefeated Wes Capper by majority decision in his last fight on March 14, 2015 at Sam’s Town Hotel & Gambling Hall in Las Vegas, Nevada. Hirsch joins the undercard on June 20 looking to continue his winning ways an opponent to be named in a six round middleweight fight.

Meng “Cold Blood” Fanlong (1-0) was the Chinese national light heavyweight champion for seven consecutive years from 2008 to 2013. Hailinging from Chi Feng, Inner Mongolia, the seven-time national Chinese champion also was awarded a gold medal during the Chinese National Games. Fanlong’s list of credits in the amateurs also includes representing China in the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing, where he won his opening bout before falling to highly touted Brazilian Yamaguchi Falcão in the round of 16; reaching the finals of the Asian Championship in 2011 when his took home the silver medal; winning three bouts at the 2011 World Amateur Boxing Championships in dominant fashion to reach the quarterfinals; and making it to the semifinals of the 2010 Asian Games, from which he brought home a bronze medal. Meng made his professional debut on January 17, 2015 at Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Connecticut, scoring a decision victory over Marcellus Yates. He will now look to continue his professional rise when he takes on Albert Avina (0-3) of Stockton, California in a four round cruiserweight bout on June 20.

Rounding out the undercard will be Wang “Jimmy” Zhimin (9-1) of Ning Bo, China who will face Jose Guzman (6-10-1) of The Bronx, New York in a six round junior welterweight bout. In 2010, Zhimin reached the final of the Chinese National Boxing Championships where he received a silver medal. A year later in 2011, Zhimin reached the pinnacle of his amateur career when he won the gold at the World Series of Boxing in his native China. In 2012, he won another silver medal, this time at the Erdos International Boxing Competition. Zhimin made his professional debut on January 17, 2015 at Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville, Connecticut scoring a unanimous decision victory over Kin Moy (Pro Debut).

Ward vs. Smith, a 12 round bout presented by Roc Nation Sports, takes place Saturday, June 20 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California, will be televised live on BET and streamed globally on TIDAL.com at 10:00 PM ET/7:00 PM PT and is presented in association with Matchroom Sport. The fight is sponsored by The Waterfront Hotel, Venue Kings , Shoe Palace, Q 102.1, 95.7 the GAME and KBLX 102.9. In addition to the great action inside the ring, the event will feature several notable Roc Nation touches that will further serve spectators with an enhanced fan experience, including Nipsey Hussle taking to the ring for a special performance prior to the main event. The event will be hosted by notable emcee Sway Calloway and will also feature hit master DJ Franzen who will serve alongside Sway throughout the night. Tickets priced at $250, $125, $90, $60 and $30, not including applicable service charges and taxes, are on sale now and available at all Ticketmaster locations, online at Ticketmaster.com and charge by phone at (800) 745-3000. Doors open at 3:00 PM, the first fight begins at 3:10 PM and the BET telecast and TIDAL.com stream begins at 10:00PM ET/7:00 PM PT.

For more information please visit www.rocnation.com. Follow Roc Nation on Twitter and Instagram @rocnation and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RocNation.

ABOUT BET NETWORKS:
BET Networks, a subsidiary of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ: VIA, VIA.B), is the nation’s leading provider of quality entertainment, music, news and public affairs television programming for the African-American audience. The primary BET channel reaches more than 90 million households and can be seen in the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, the United Kingdom and sub-Saharan Africa. BET is the dominant African-American consumer brand with a diverse group of business extensions: BET.com, a leading Internet destination for Black entertainment, music, culture, and news; CENTRIC, a 24-hour entertainment network targeting the 25- to 54-year-old African-American audience; BET Digital Networks – BET Gospel and BET Hip Hop, attractive alternatives for cutting-edge entertainment tastes; BET Home Entertainment, a collection of BET-branded offerings for the home environment including DVDs and video-on-demand; BET Event Productions, a full-scale event management and production company with festivals and live events spanning the globe; BET Mobile, which provides ringtones, games and video content for wireless devices; and BET International, which operates BET in the United Kingdom and oversees the extension of BET network programming for global distribution.??

ABOUT ROC NATION SPORTS:
Roc Nation Sports, a sub-division of Roc Nation, launched in spring 2013. Founder Shawn “JAY Z” Carter’s love of sports lead to the natural formation of Roc Nations Sports, helping athletes in the same way Roc Nation has been helping artists in the music industry for years. Roc Nation Sports focuses on elevating athletes’ career on a global scale both on and off the field. Roc Nation Sports conceptualizes and executes marketing and endorsement deals, community outreach, charitable tie-ins, media relations and brand strategy. Roc Nation Sports launched its boxing division, a full service promotional company which represents world champions Miguel Cotto and Andre Ward, in August 2014. Roc Nation Sports’ roster includes premiere athletes such as Robinson Cano, Skylar Diggins, Kevin Durant, Geno Smith, Victor Cruz, CC Sabathia, James Young, Dez Bryant, Ndamukong Suh, Rusney Castillo, Yoenis Cespedes, Jaelen Strong, Todd Gurley, Wilson Chandler, Erick Aybar and Frances Tiafoe. For more information please visit www.rocnation.com. Follow Roc Nation on Twitter and Instagram @rocnation and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RocNation.

ABOUT ORACLE ARENA & O.co COLISEUM:
Oracle Arena and O.co Coliseum, managed by AEG Facilities, are the premiere sports and entertainment complexes in Northern California. Home of the NBA’s Golden State Warriors, the NFL’s Oakland Raiders and MLB’s Oakland Athletics as well as host to concerts, family shows and special events. Additional information on Oracle Arena and O.co Coliseum, including a complete schedule of events can be found online at www.coliseum.com. Follow Oracle Arena on Twitter, Instagram, Vine and Snapchat @OracleArena and on Facebook www.faecbook.com/OracleArenaO.coColiseum.




Andre Ward to return against Paul Smith on June 20 on BET

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Andre Ward will return after a 19-month layoff when he takes on Paul Smith at Oracle Arena in Oakland in a bout that will be televised by BET, according to Dan Rafael of espn.com.

“We’re thrilled to not only be introducing our newest broadcast partnership with BET Networks, but also to use this new platform to telecast Andre Ward’s highly anticipated return to the ring,” said David Itskowitch, COO of Roc Nation Sports’ boxing division. “On June 20, we will once again provide fans a night of exciting ‘throne boxing’ fights, live musical entertainment and an unprecedented fan experience.”

Said Stephen G. Hill, BET’s president of programming, “BET is constantly searching for ways to expand its portfolio of content with the sole goal of satisfying our audiences. Roc Nation is doing very exciting things in the entertainment space and we are excited to partner with them on this groundbreaking deal positioning BET Networks as a go-to destination for premier live boxing events. Together, we’ll provide unique entertainment.”

“I’m very excited to be coming back on June 20 at Oracle Arena in my hometown of Oakland, which has been a long time coming,” Ward said. “I’m equally excited to be fighting on BET in front of a potential viewership of over 90 million homes. As a fighter, this diversifies my portfolio and puts me in front of a whole different audience. I have an extremely tough fighter in front of me in Paul Smith, who’s looking to pull the upset, but I can’t let that happen.

“I have to be on my best game to turn Smith away and beat him the way I want to beat him. As always, I’m ready to put on a tremendous performance in front of my hometown fans and those watching on BET. This is a fight you don’t want to miss.”

“I cannot wait to get back in the ring and test myself against a class act like Andre Ward,” Smith said. “I proved that I belong at the top level with my performances against Arthur Abraham and this is a challenge that I am relishing. Andre is a top pound-for-pound fighter and someone I respect a lot, but he has only boxed once in almost three years and I will give it everything I have got.

“I am fresh and confident going into this fight. It’s a massive opportunity for me and one that I took with both hands when it was offered. I have spent a lot of time boxing in the United States and I look forward to returning for this fight.”




Ward to return on June 20

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According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, Super Middleweight champion Andre Ward will make his debut under the Roc Nation Banner on June 20 in Oakland, California that will end a 19-month ring hiatus.

“I’m excited to be back. We finally have a date,” Ward told ESPN.com. “It’s going to be June 20 at Oracle Arena in Oakland. I wanted to fight at home as a thank-you to my fans for being patient, because I know it’s been a long wait. The fight is not far away and I feel like I’m in great shape already. I’ve stayed dedicated to the sport. I’ve stayed motivated in the gym and I’m just really excited to get back. I can’t wait.”

“Andre’s opponent and the TV coverage for the fight will be announced shortly,” Roc Nation Sports spokesman Ron Berkowitz told ESPN.com.

“Some people are trying to see if I’ve slipped during this layoff or if I still have it, but my true fans are just ready to see me back in action,” Ward said. “We get to answer those questions on June 20 at Oracle Arena. Let’s get it.”




Andre Ward signs with Roc Nation

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According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, Super Middleweight champion Andre Ward became the first big name fighter to sign with new boxing promoter Roc Nation.

Details of how the split with Goossen Promotions came about after years of legal battling were not disclosed, but Tom Brown of Goossen Promotions clearly was not happy with the result.

“That chapter is closed. I’ve moved on,” Brown told ESPN.com.

“We have signed Andre Ward and it’s something we’re very excited about,” David Itskowitch, chief operating officer of Roc Nation Sports’ boxing division, told ESPN.com. “It’s just the beginning for us but it’s a game-changer. He’s one of the best fighters in the world. Everything is coming together for us. On the same day we are having our first event, at Madison Square Garden, we are announcing our first really huge signing.”

“I wholeheartedly believe in Roc Nation Sports and I just believe that they have the vision and the power and resources to carry their vision out,” Ward told ESPN.com.

“I followed his lead on the whole situation and at the right time we talked about it and he asked how did I feel about (making the move) and he went through the steps to get to this point,” Ward said. “I felt it was the best move for me at this stage of my career.”

“We’re going to sit down and talk about when he will specifically fight and the level of opponent he will fight,” Itskowitch said. “He’s been out of the ring for a while. We’ll come up with names and come up with a date but we’re excited to give him the opportunity to show he’s one of the best in the world.”

“I kept myself in shape and I’ve stayed motivated and hungry,” Ward said. “But there’s nothing concrete now. I want to get back in the groove and consistently fight and get back on track. I don’t see what the rush is to push me to a higher weight class. I am not far off my fighting weight and I am super middleweight champion of the world and I want to defend my title.”

“I’m just excited about moving forward. It’s been a grueling two years but I can see what’s ahead in the future,” Ward said. “No regrets. Unfortunately, these things happen in the sport but it truly made me stronger as an individual and as a fighter.

“I embraced the whole process through the good and the bad and now I am on the other side of it. It can either make you, so to speak, or break you and I think it made me a stronger person.”




Ward loses to Goossen again in court

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Andre Ward maybe undefeated in the ring but he can’t beat promoter Dan Goossen in the court as yet another one of his cases against his promoter Dan Goossen has been thrown out in the California court according to Dan Rafael of espn.com.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Holly Kendig issued a ruling dismissing Ward’s latest attempt to terminate his promotional contract. Kendig ruled that Ward had not stated “any basis upon which to invalidate the contract” and the case was dismissed.

Ward had attempted to break the contract by arguing that the promotional agreement was in violation of California Labor Code Section 2855. In essence, that section of the code says a contract for personal services may not be enforced beyond seven years.

However, the court rejected the contention that he was under a personal services contract. Ward re-signed with Goossen for three years in April 2011 and received a $550,000 signing bonus.

In making the ruling, Kendig noted that the California State Athletic Commission had already twice ruled against Ward in separate arbitration hearings pertaining to efforts to break the promotional agreement.




Ya’ll Must Have Forgot: Jones could have been singing about Ward

By Norm Frauenheim-
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Roy Jones Jr. continues to fight and we wish he wouldn’t. Andre Ward doesn’t fight and we wish he would.

It’s hard to explain and harder to understand. Then again, business-as-usual has never made much sense in a sport where the primary goal is to render the other guy senseless. In one form or another, it gets repeated, ad nauseam. Ward might not be the worst example. He’s just the current one.

Ward is still included among the top five on those pound-for-pound lists, yet he’s persona-non-grata in discussions about middleweight Gennady Golovkin’s options after a predictable stoppage of Daniel Geale in New York, or speculation about light-heavyweight Sergey Kovalev’s next move after a likely victory Saturday over Blake Caparello in Atlantic City. This was the same Ward who beat Carl Froch and would probably be the pick to beat him in a rematch. Yet, Ward was bypassed without a mention in ongoing discussions for a Jan. 24 bout with Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., who once flirted with the idea of Ward, yet moved on.

Ward fought once in 2012. Once in 2013. He hasn’t fought at all in 2014. Shoulder surgery contributed to the inactivity. More problematic, however, is a lawsuit filed last December against promoter Dan Goossen. Ward is attempting to end a contract that ties him to Goossen until November 2016, according to an arbiter’s ruling — one of two that upheld the deal.

In the wake of the filing, Ward said he planned to be active in 2014. He told www.ringtv.com that he hoped to be back in the ring in March or April. The closest he’s been, however, is on the talking side of the ropes. He’ll be there Saturday night as an analyst for HBO’s Boxing After Dark telecast of the Brandon Rios-Diego Chaves from Las Vegas in triple-header telecast that will include Kovalev-Caparello.

Ward is in legal limbo. Amend that. More like legal hell. The lawsuit is a messy web that includes Ward co-promoter Antonio Leonard, who alleges Goossen failed to pay him for his work in Ward’s last fight, a unanimous decision over Edwin Rodriquez in November, 2013. No telling when, if ever, it all gets resolved.

The longer it goes, the more Ward has to lose. He’s 30, his prime. Inactivity also comes with a price to his reputation. He’s unable to prove the naysayers wrong and there are plenty. Fair or not, Ward is known to be difficult in negotiations. He was criticized for not traveling to Europe for a bout in the super-middleweight’s Super Six tournament, which he eventually won. Mention his name as a possibility for Golovkin at 168 pounds or Kovalev at 175, and he’s immediately dismissed as a fighter unable to sell tickets or generate television ratings. Floyd Mayweather Jr. labored under the same assumption until he was allowed to prove it wrong with history’s two highest pay-per-view audiences against Oscar De La Hoya and Canelo Alvarez.

As long as he doesn’t fight, the unbeaten Ward can’t prove himself as a worthy attraction. Until he can, criticism of him from Golovkin’s promoters or Kovalev’s managers is gratuitous. Until his legal situation is cleared up, few would agree to fight him anyway. That’s not good for him or a business that can’t let a valuable resource waste away. It’s already been a year of declining pay-per-view numbers. In a non-PPV bout, Golovkin’s ratings fell in his third-round stoppage of Geale. According to Nielsen Media Research, the bout averaged 984,000 viewers, down from the 1.41-million average for Golovkin’s stoppage of Curtis Stevens in November.

The decline has been blamed on the quick stoppage. The theory is that there would have been more viewers if the fight had gone beyond just three rounds. Golovkin’s victory over Stevens went into the eighth. A summer lull also been blamed. But both sound like spin. Sure, maybe, many of the usual customers were at the beach instead of in front of their television screens. If they were, however, it might have been because one fighter, Golovkin, is from Kazakhstan, still better-known for Borat than GGG. Then, there was Geale, who is from Australia, better known for Russell Crowe and Crocodile Dundee than middleweights.

The numbers, pay-per-view or non-PPV, would have been a lot higher had Golovkin fought Ward. That’s a safe guess, a slam dunk. If only a Golovkin-Ward, or even Kovalev-Ward, was a sure thing.

It’s not. Without it, the decline in television numbers figures to continue. It makes me think of an old lyric by Jones, who will be in Atlantic City as an HBO analyst for Kovalev-Caprello Saturday one week after his fifth-round stoppage of somebody named Courtney Fry in Latvia.

In 2002, Jones released a rap CD that included Ya’ll Must Have Forgot. Jones re-states his pound-for-pound claim in the old song. More than a decade later, it has a different meaning, yet might be as relevant as ever. Fans might forget Ward in a business that needs him and them.




Andre Ward loses contract dispute with Goossen

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According to Dan Rafael of espn.com, world Super Middleweight champion Andre Ward lost his 2nd court battle to his promoter Dan Goossen in a contract dispute.

Ward’s contract with Goossen was declared valid until Nov. 8, 2016, according to Foster’s ruling.

“It’s now time to sit down with Andre and his advisers to put these legal disputes behind us and concentrate on getting Andre back to fighting consistently inside the ring,” Goossen said. “Andre and I have had success together and there’s no reason not to get back on track as a team to secure his status as the top fighter in the world behind Floyd Mayweather.”

On Wednesday night, Josh Dubin, Ward’s attorney, and James Prince, his manager, issued a statement on Ward’s behalf saying they planned to continue to fight to break the contract.

“We want to be crystal clear: the ‘legal issues’ that [Goossen] referred to are only just getting underway. It is only after a California judge or jury speaks that the legal issues will be resolved,” the statement said. “Today’s decision from the California State Athletic Commission was not unexpected. From the very start, we do not feel that the commission has been looking out for the best interests of Andre Ward, the very boxer they are supposed to protect. To the contrary, for some inexplicable reason, the CSAC has continually bent over backwards to try to accommodate a promoter who we feel is taking horrible advantage of Andre and his career. …

“This is not the end of Andre’s fight to stand up for what he knows is right, but rather the beginning. The CSAC decision has only strengthened his resolve.

“Andre’s lawsuit against Dan Goossen and his promotional company in California Superior Court is continuing to move forward. It has always been Andre’s steadfast belief, as well as ours, that the state court system, not the CSAC, is the proper venue for his dispute with Dan Goossen. It is Team Ward’s belief that the arbitration before the CSAC should not have proceeded while Andre’s lawsuit is pending, so we do not feel that the decision is ultimately going to be binding.”

Foster ruled the contract should be extended for 14 months, a clear Goossen win.

“Of course I’m pleased with the decision. It was the right result both morally and legally,” said attorney Bert Fields, who argued the case for Goossen. “Ward’s a great fighter, but it was Goossen who helped build his professional career and put him in position to command the really big bucks.”




The joy of Andre Ward

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American super middleweight Andre Ward is the sole prizefighter I routinely review in slow motion, the only active world champion whose subtleties bring a continuing euphoria of discovery to me. Ward is, in his way, our sport’s most unpredictable fighter, and most complicated fighter – or did you think he cleaned out the once-competitive 168-pound division some other way?

Saturday found Ward at Citizens Business Bank Arena somewhere in California, unfastening Edwin Rodriguez, a man who, between the ordeal of his prematurely born children and voluntary participation in antidoping tests (whatever his surplus of bacne should otherwise indicate), has enjoyed years on our sport’s good-guy circuit, while fighting nobody. Saturday Rodriguez fought somebody, and even after missing weight by two pounds Friday, Rodriguez lost about 35/36 of the fight, or at best 11/12.

Andre Ward continues to improve, and that brings from the front of one’s mind a retrospective request that sends it on a skittering search for the last time a fighter fractionally as accomplished as Ward improved regularly as Ward does. One wishes to say Manny Pacquiao, from the introduction of “Manila Ice,” the righthand activated for his 2005 match with Erik Morales, an improvement and nickname that introduced many to trainer Freddie Roach’s fresh wit – when he found Shakespeare and lost an entire audience at a prefight press conference, warning Morales: “Beware the ‘Ice’ of March” – but one just as quickly thinks of the Pacquiao who fought his third match with Juan Manuel Marquez six years later, got summarily undressed in rounds 7 through 11, and tactically looked little better than his 2005 self.

Fighters improve in obscurity, like craftsmen of every kind, and obscurity is hard to encounter or embrace once a fighter begins to earn million-dollar purses. What improvements happen, generally, are feats of conditioning that enjoy characteristically dubious origins. Every other time a fighter’s new trainer says adjustments galore have been made, adjustments galore have not been made, even if words galore have been spoken to the fighter and media about adjustments galore, and reversions to form are inevitable.

Ward prides himself on being formless, in a nod to combat-fighting legend Bruce Lee, and one would quickly call that Ward’s greatest strength, if Ward didn’t have so many strengths. Ward does not do any one thing much better than any other thing, but whereas the cliché usually follows that he’s not great at one thing but good at everything, Ward is great at everything. He is Floyd Mayweather if Mayweather had spent the last decade matching himself with men who believed they might beat him. Every Ward opponent believes he can beat Ward, somehow, and that is extraordinary when one watches Saturday’s fight in slow motion – as Edwin Rodriguez is an order of magnitude below Ward’s station and could not have won a clean round against Ward had he missed weight by 20 pounds instead of two.

In a prizefighting ring, even at 168 pounds Andre Ward would beat most American heavyweights quite easily. Are those men physically stronger? Most, yes, but not by nearly so much as we tell ourselves, and Ward’s balance and understanding of his own body and other men’s bodies would quickly offset the physical advantages even much larger men might enjoy when the opening bell rang. What is lost quite often by television but incredibly apparent at ringside is Ward’s superior footwork, especially in clinches; it appeared in this column 14 months ago but warrants repetition: Ward frees his hands with his feet. He churns his feet, which churns his hips, which moves his shoulders and brings his hands out of other men’s grasps, often no matter how tightly they hold.

In this way, Ward is already superior to Mayweather, who utilizes clinches strategically, too, but does not fight out of them – breaks, occasionally, yes, but not clinches – so much as use them to sap an opponent of his poise till a referee’s intervention. When Mayweather is on, every defensive maneuver is a prolonged offensive one, but once Mayweather’s right knuckles start to throb under the leather and foam of his glove, his defensive moves become exactly and strictly that. Ward never finds himself in this position and certainly never gets put there by others. Though Mayweather is many times the fighter – read: the willing participant in a savage spectacle that requires being struck repeatedly to the head as a tariff for striking others more repeatedly – than his newly arrived fans and critics understand, it has been many years since he thrilled in the physical-confrontation element of prizefighting the way Ward does, many years since Mayweather so easily avoided the urge to take another man’s punches personally.

Edwin Rodriguez, introspective enough to realize a lottery ticket was needed to have a chance against Ward, sprinted from his corner at the opening bell Saturday and tried nearly to tackle Ward who dissuaded him both with parrying and with punching. Once the clinches began, Rodriguez struck Ward repeatedly behind the head, and Ward just as repeatedly retaliated and appeared happy to continue retaliating, howsoever worked best, until referee Jack Reiss interfered; it was a treatment of ref-as-annoyance that we rarely see anymore from favorites in prizefights. Much later in the match, after both men received warnings for infractions and lost two penalty points each, Rodriguez caught Ward again on the brainstem, and when Ward withdrew to reset and attack anew, Jack Reiss asked if he was OK, and Ward answered “Yeah” in a way that sounded surprised and annoyed by Reiss’ implication.

If middleweight titlist Gennady Golovkin is fractionally good as his advocates increasingly believe, a day will come when a Ward-Golovkin match will be anticipated by aficionados, if not gangsta rappers, more than Mayweather-Pacquiao was, and Ward and Golovkin will fight, and quite possibly more than once. Ward will win, and when he emerges victorious, he will attain, and eventually be recognized as having attained, a level of greatness for which Floyd Mayweather was ever temperamentally unprepared.

Bart Barry can be reached at bart.barrys.email (at) gmail.com




Ward decisions Rodriguez in rough, ugly contest

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It started at yesterday’s weigh-in when Edwin Rodriguez failed to make weight for his WBA Super Middleweight clash with Andre Ward. Then he and Ward engaged in an ugly fight that saw Ward easily score a twelve round unanimous decision ast the Citizens Business Bank Arena in Ontario, California.

The fight started out with Rodriguez running across the ring and trying to bully Ward. Ward would have nine of that as he started drilling Rodriguez with pinpoint shots with both hands. Ward was dominating the fight with both hands and featured a hard power jab. In round four, the fight turned ugly as inordinate amount of clutching and grabbing by both men forced referee Jack Reiss to not only pause the bout but take two points away from each man, warn them and suggest that the commission fine both fighters. Reiss also intimated that he was hit by a stray punch.

“We had two highly trained athletes full of adrenalin and emotion,” the veteran referee observed. “I deducted two points from each of them and warned them that the deduction of another point would result in a disqualification. That was done with the intent to produce an exciting, competitive fight all the way to its conclusion. And it did.”

That admonishment seemed to work as the bout picked up a better flow but unfortunately for Rodriguez it was all Ward as he continued to rock Rodriguez with body shots, hard jabs and even an uppercut that hurt Rodriguez in round eleven.

Despite being off 14 months for shoulder surgery, Ward solidified his status among the pound for pound elite bu pounding out the decision by scores of 118-106, 117-107 and 116-108 to raise his perfect mark to 27-0. Rodrigiez or Worcester, MA is now 24-1.

“We knew he would come out and try and bull me,” said Ward, who showed no ill effects from his inactivity following surgery to his right shoulder.

“Instead of trying to win rounds he was looking to land one big shot. He wanted to make it ugly and hope he could land something big. Jack Reiss did a tremendous job keeping the action going.”

“He was putting his head down a little too much,” a frustrated Rodriguez pointed out. “Andre Ward is very tricky, but does not have a lot of power in his right hand. I am just disappointed in my performance. The weight had nothing to do with it. He’s a good fighter. What can I say?”




WARD LAYS DOWN GAUNTLET BY DECLARING TO KNOCKOUT ‘DELUSIONAL’ FROCH IN REMATCH AHEAD OF FIGHT THIS WEEKEND LIVE ON BOXNATION

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LONDON (16 Nov) – Super-middleweight king Andre Ward has laid down the gauntlet to Carl Froch, declaring he can knockout the ‘delusional’ British star in a world title unification rematch.

The WBA Super and Ring Magazine world champion has opened the door to a potential blockbuster matchup against the reigning IBF world champion Froch, should both men come through their upcoming battles.

Ward faces off against the unbeaten Edwin Rodriguez in Ontario, California this weekend, a fight you can see live and exclusive on BoxNation, with Froch taking on the rising George Groves in a grudge match later this month.

Should both prevail, Ward is convinced that a super-fight could be next up for the 168-pound division’s two top dogs.

“I think a fight with Froch is definitely something that could happen,” said Ward.

“I’ve said this so many times but I’m not chasing that fight. I won the last fight hands down, and I would be secure moving on. But it’s something that he feels he wants to get another crack at and I’m open for that, absolutely,” he said.

The Olympic gold medalist is also of the belief he can make an early night of it should he share the ring with the Nottingham man again, especially due to the fact he fought with a broken left hand in their first encounter.

“I think I could stop Froch in a rematch. I don’t believe the hype that Froch is invincible. I think he has a really good chin, has taken some big shots and stood up under them and I give him credit for that,” Ward said.

“But sometimes the media makes him out to be some iron man who can’t be stopped. He can be stopped if he gets hit with flush shots.

“It’s only natural to think that if you come into a fight inhibited, injured and limited and you’re still able to do a certain amount of work – if you’re fully healthy just imagine what would happen,” he stated.

The bad blood between the pair has grown ever since their fight in December 2011, due in part to a perceived lack of respect from Froch who has questioned his contemporary’s drawing power.

“I don’t look at it as disrespect – I think he’s delusional,” Ward stated.

“Look at Carl Froch and some of the stuff he says and it doesn’t always add up. One aspect he talks about [is drawing power], if you look at his last ratings on HBO and my last one, it’s night and day.

“He had a few hundred thousand people watch his fight in America and we had over a million watch my last fight with Chad Dawson, so I think he needs to focus on what he’s doing,” said Ward.

The 29-year-old from Oakland has also thrown into question Froch’s apparent warrior tag and has asked why he never brought it to the fore when they clashed.

“It’s funny when a guy says you’re boring but he had 12 rounds, 12 rounds, to make it interesting, to be the monster that he says that he is and get a war going,” he said.

“If you watch that fight I didn’t run, I didn’t duck, I didn’t dodge, I was right in the pocket with him. It was tougher than he thought it was going to be, so instead of giving me my just due he makes excuses,” Ward added.

“Now he’s turning into a TV executive, and then a promoter, when he’s talking about no one wants to watch me. Well, his fans in the UK want to watch me as well as fans in the US, so I just don’t think the stuff he says is accurate or adds up,” he said.

Ward believes that the three-time world champion should take a leaf out of Ricky Hatton’s book and give credit where credit is due.

The fan favourite ‘Hitman’ suffered defeats against two of boxing’s household names in Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao but was quick to praise both following his losses, something which Ward thinks Froch can learn from.

“It’s really sad a champion of his calibre can’t give a guy his just due and say ‘you know what, he was the better man that night’,” said Ward.

“I think the fans would respect him a lot more if he did that, American fans and UK fans. Look at Ricky Hatton, he was that type of guy, he lost and he said ‘no excuses, it was my fault’ and then moved onto the next one,” Ward said.

“I think that’s why Ricky Hatton is so beloved the way he is because he was going to give it his all, 100%, and if it didn’t go right he wasn’t going to make excuses. And that’s what Carl Froch specialises in – making excuses,” he said.

Andre Ward vs. Edwin Rodriguez is live on BoxNation (Sky Ch. 437/Virgin Ch. 546) this Sunday at 2am. Visit www.boxnation.com to subscribe.

-Ends-
About BoxNation
BoxNation, the Channel of Champions and proud partner of Rainham Steel, is the UK’s first dedicated subscription boxing channel. For £10* a month and no minimum term customers can enjoy great value live and exclusive fights, classic fight footage, magazine shows and interviews with current and former fighters.

BoxNation is proud to support Fight for Peace, a charity that uses boxing and martial arts combined with education and personal development to realise the potential of young people in communities that suffer from crime and violence. Buy LUTA (www.luta.co.uk) clothing and support Fight for Peace.

Previous highlights have included Haye vs Chisora, Khan vs Diaz and Mayweather vs Alvarez.

The channel is available on Sky (ch 437), Virgin (ch 546), online at Livesport.tv and via iPhone, iPad or Android.

BoxNation is also available to commercial premises (inc. pubs, clubs and casino’s) in the UK and Ireland, for more information on a commercial subscription please call 0844 842 7700.

For more information visit www.boxnation.com

*Plus £10 one off registration fee for Sky TV and new Livesport.tv customers.




Rodriguez overweight for Ward showdown

edwin-rodriguez
Super Middleweight Edwin Rodriguez was 2 pounds over the 168 pound weight limit for his Saturday fight with champion Andre Ward in Ontario, California according to Dan Rafel of espn.com

“We’re going to work on [losing the 2 pounds]. I feel pretty good,” Rodriguez said while still at the scale after being overweight. “I’m gonna work on it.”

“I think there’s a chance Edwin might not be able to make this weight again,” Lou DiBella, Rodriguez’s promoter, told ESPN.com. “He couldn’t lose another ounce. He couldn’t even spit.”

For missing weight, the commission fined Rodriguez 20 percent of his career-high $1 million purse. Of the $200,000 fine, half will go to the commission and the remaining $100,000 will be given to Ward, boosting his purse from $1.9 million to $2 million.

As part of a deal made with the Ward camp, Rodriguez is required to reweigh at 9 a.m. PT on Saturday and cannot be heavier than 180 pounds.

“It’s at his peril,” DiBella said.

“I’m greatly disappointed and I’m really annoyed,” DiBella said. “I’m not a hypocrite. I’ve been public about this situation with other fighters and talked about their unprofessionalism, and I’m not going to change my tune because he’s my fighter.

“This is the opportunity of your lifetime, this is everything to this kid and his family, and I’m greatly disappointed. I truly believe in him as a fighter and that he had a chance to do something great, and now he is in a situation where he can’t win the belt, and he has been docked money his family desperately needed, and I have a hard time believing he will be at his best. I have empathy if he simply couldn’t make the weight, but that doesn’t change the annoyance or disappointment or stop me from saying I’m sorry on behalf of his team to Andre Ward, Ward’s team, HBO and to the fans.”




KHAN HAILS STABLEMATE WARD AS ONE OF THE WORLD’S BEST AND BACKS HIM TO SHINE ON RING RETURN LIVE ON BOXNATION

Amir Khan
LONDON (Nov 15) – Boxing ace Amir Khan has hailed stablemate Andre Ward as one of the world’s very best, declaring that he’ll make an explosive ring return this weekend, live on BoxNation.

The super-middleweight world champion, who holds the WBA Super and Ring Magazine titles, makes his long-awaited return to the squared circle following an injury to his shoulder which has kept him out of action since September 2012.

Having seen Ward at close quarters, since joining up with trainer Virgil Hunter last year, who has honed the skills of the American since childhood, Khan is in no doubt that a revitalised and rejuvenated Ward will dismantle his so far unbeaten opponent, Edwin Rodriguez.

“Andre Ward is a tremendous fighter and one of the very best in the world. I think for any fighter going in against him it’s going to be very tricky. Edwin Rodriguez is undefeated but you’ve got to come with a lot more than that when facing someone like Ward,” said Khan.

“He’s the type of fighter who can make adjustments in the ring and isn’t one dimensional in his approach. After being out for so long I’m sure he’ll want to bounce back with a big win and a big performance, and I’m fully expecting him to come out and try and impress from the get-go.

“He’s looked really good in the gym and he’ll use the frustration from over a year out to his benefit come Saturday night,” Khan added.

The former unified light-welterweight world champion has also backed Ward’s unique ability to be just as proficient using his slick boxing skills from the outside as he is dealing with the roughhouse tactics often utilised by his opponents from close in.

Khan expects Rodriguez to deploy an aggressive, come-forward approach, which he believes will lead to his downfall.

“I think Rodriguez is going to try and take the fight to him from the start and see if there is any ring rust there. By doing that though he can get picked off and walk into a big shot,” said Khan.

“There’s a misconception that Ward doesn’t like to engage and get involved but he’s tough enough, and clever enough, to stand with Rodriguez and still get the better of the fight from the inside,” he said.

“Ward won’t be rushed and he’ll look to break Rodriguez down round-by-round before trying to close the show. It’s a great stage and chance for Rodriguez, which could spur him on, but I believe Ward will just have too much for him,” Khan stated.

A possible match-up for the 29-year-old from Oakland, California is a rematch with British bruiser Carl Froch.

Ward convincingly beat the man from Nottingham when they met in December 2011 but his recent triumphs over Lucian Bute and Mikkel Kessler, plus the bad blood between the pair, has led to calls for them to share the ring again, something which excites Khan.

“If Ward and Froch fought again it would be a huge fight, particularly in Britain. They’ve both excelled in the super-middleweight division and are the two leading names there now,” he said.

“They’re both world champions, so it’s a fight which definitely makes sense and one boxing fans want to see. I believe the fight would follow the same course as the first one. The thing is with Ward he’s very clever and smart, and can fight inside just as well as he does outside,” said Khan.

“Carl is an all-action sort of fighter and I think that plays into Ward’s hands because he can use his boldness against him. Ward would be more eager to try and get the stoppage in a rematch, because of some of the things which were said after the first fight, but there’s no doubt it would be a really exciting match up and occasion,” he said.

“The onus would be on Carl to take Ward into the trenches and force him to fight his kind of fight but that wouldn’t be easy to do because Ward is very disciplined and makes adjustments,” Khan declared.

Ward vs. Rodriguez is live and exclusive on BoxNation (Sky Ch. 437/Virgin Ch. 546) from 2am this Sunday morning. Visit www.boxnation.com to subscribe.

-Ends-
About BoxNation
BoxNation, the Channel of Champions and proud partner of Rainham Steel, is the UK’s first dedicated subscription boxing channel. For £10* a month and no minimum term customers can enjoy great value live and exclusive fights, classic fight footage, magazine shows and interviews with current and former fighters.

BoxNation is proud to support Fight for Peace, a charity that uses boxing and martial arts combined with education and personal development to realise the potential of young people in communities that suffer from crime and violence. Buy LUTA (www.luta.co.uk) clothing and support Fight for Peace.

Previous highlights have included Haye vs Chisora, Khan vs Diaz and Mayweather vs Alvarez.

The channel is available on Sky (ch 437), Virgin (ch 546), online at Livesport.tv and via iPhone, iPad or Android.

BoxNation is also available to commercial premises (inc. pubs, clubs and casino’s) in the UK and Ireland, for more information on a commercial subscription please call 0844 842 7700.

For more information visit www.boxnation.com

*Plus £10 one off registration fee for Sky TV and new Livesport.tv customers.




Setting 2014’s Table: Andre Ward gets his turn

wardbeltwinner150
It’s your turn, Andre Ward.

Ward’s comeback Saturday night in Ontario, Calif., against Edwin Rodriquez (HBO 10 p.m. ET/PT) is just the latest in a succession of Saturdays that sets the table for 2014 and perhaps beyond.

It started with Gennady Golovkin’s middleweight stoppage of Curtis Stevens on Nov. 2 in New York, continued with Mikey Garcia’s junior-lightweight knockout of Ramon Martinez on Nov. 9 in Corpus Christi, Tex., continues with Ward-Rodriguez at super-middleweight and reaches a peak on Nov. 23 with Manny Pacquiao-Brandon Rios at welterweight in Macao.

It’s an uninterrupted series at different weights, yet with a common story line that determines who belongs, who doesn’t, who’s hot, who’s shot and maybe somebody who can challenge Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s pound-for-pound supremacy.

Golovkin and Garcia did what they were supposed to. They are newcomers no more. With a mix of tactical skill, power and poise possessed by each, Golovkin and Garcia fought and won like the major players they figure to be in any of next year’s projected bouts.

Now, it’s up to Ward and then Pacquiao. Same goal, yet the roles differ from Golovkin and Garcia. Both Ward and Pacquiao aren’t emerging stars. Instead, they are fighting to prove that they still are one.

Ward, often listed second to Mayweather in the pound-for-pound debate, has enjoyed critical acclaim from the media throughout his unbeaten career, yet the customers aren’t listening. He’s not a draw, perhaps because he’s been sidelined by injuries, or poorly promoted by Dan Goossen, or unappreciated by modern fans who want more blood and bruises than defensive skill.

Ward, who will turn 30 on Feb. 23, faces an unbeaten Rodriguez in his first fight since undergoing surgery on his right shoulder 14 months ago. He tried to end his deal with Goossen, but lost in arbitration. Goossen is still with him. The guess in this corner is that his skill set is too.

But the burden of proof rests with his ability to win and win big against an unbeaten Rodriguez, who has enough power to make it dangerous in the early going. More than a year of inactivity might make Ward a little tentative in the opening rounds.

For Ward, the task is to get back into the conversation and perhaps generate some speculation about a fight with Golovkin. If not Golovkin, there is Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. A fight with Chavez Jr. might awaken Mexico’s loyal fans to Ward’s ability, often subtle, yet a lot easier to appreciate than anything seen lately in the erratic son of the Mexican legend.

Ward needs to create an audience. Pacquiao already has one.

Yet even it is nervous about who will show up on Nov. 23 in a bout that also represents the biggest step in promoter Bob Arum’s attempt to create a Chinese market. The last time we saw Pacquiao, he was face-down and unconscious from a crushing knockout by a right from Juan Manuel Marquez in December.

Pacquiao, trainer Freddie Roach and Arum are saying all of the right things. Knockouts happen. Pacqiao has looked as “brave” as ever in sparring, Roach said in a conference call from General Santos City, Pacquiao’s Filipino hometown, which was not affected by the devastating typhoon that hit other parts of the island nation.

Roach said he expects Pacquiao to knock out Rios within six rounds. But even he conceded he couldn’t be certain how Pacquiao will react until opening bell. Roach has only his own experience as a featherweight and lightweight. But it’s a reason for caution.

“To be honest with you, when I was knocked out for the first time, it changed my whole career, because I was never as brave as Manny,’’ Roach said. “I lost my self-confidence. But Manny is not like me. Manny is a realist and he accepts it. I know everybody doesn’t think the same way. But since he accepts it, it doesn’t bother him.”

If Roach’s confidence isn’t misplaced and the fearless, relentless Pacquiao is back, Roach would like to see a rematch in a fifth fight with Marquez.

“We wanted to fight Marquez but Marquez refused to fight us,’’ Roach said “We want Marquez one more time, yes. That’s the fight we want. Mayweather too, of course.’’

Of course, Mayweather hasn’t said anything about that renewed possibility. There are still a couple of Saturdays to go before he can really address that one.

AZ Notes
· Speaking of comebacks, remember Jose Benavidez Jr.? The unbeaten junior-welterweight (17-0, 13 KOs) from Phoenix is scheduled for his first fight in more than a year Saturday at the AVI Resort & Casino in Laughlin, Nev., on a televised card (Solo Boxeo on UniMas, 11 pm. ET/PT) featured by 140-pound contender Jose Felix (25-0-1, 20 KOs) against Santos Benavides (23-4-1, 17 KOs). Benavidez, who has undergone a couple of surgical procedures on a troublesome right hand, hasn’t fought since October, 2012 when he was rocked late in an 8-round victory by unanimous decision over Pavel Miranda. He’s scheduled for a six-rounder against Mexican Abraham Alvarez (16-4-1, 7 KOs) First bell is scheduled for 6:30 p.m.

· Another Saturday night card (first bell 6 p.m.) is scheduled in Phoenix at Celebrity Theatre. Iron Boy Promotions has eight bouts planned. Phoenix junior-welterweight Juan Garcia (18-3, 7 KOs) is in the main against Rashad Ganaway (14-3-1, 9 KOs).